How to Easily Build a "Down and Dirty" Biodiesel Processor...
...at Home, using easy to find parts, inyour Spare
Time, for Less Than the Cost of Heating Your Home for One Month in the Winter!
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details
Biodiesel Reactor plans: A simple Free 5 gallon biodiesel reactor
plan
Cheap, simple, safe and effective
Courtesy of www.Journeytoforever.org
You can use it once a week and this 5-gallon (20-litre) biodiesel processor will make you 200 gallons of
quality biodiesel a year. We made hundreds of gallons with this processor before scaling up to bigger batches, and we still use it for small
batches and demonstrations. Like our test-batch processor, it's easy to make from not very much, mostly scrap and
junk. It's effective and safe, closed and air-tight, with no splashing or leaking of hot fumes. It's suitable
for single-stage or two-stage processes. And you can take it anywhere.
The only thing we bought was the immersion heater, which we already had. This one is 1.5 kw, more than enough -- probably a 500-watt unit would
do. You could fit a thermostat or a rheostat (better) to maintain constant heat, but we didn't bother -- we found you only need to switch it on
for a couple of minutes once or at most twice during the process, easy enough.
There's no need to follow this prescription exactly -- use what's to hand, improvise. For instance, if you
don't have a welder or can't make a steel stand, make a stand out of bits of wood bolted together and grip the drill in a portable vice clamped
to the vertical. Steel can also be drilled and bolted together. For this biodiesel processor you could also use a small pump instead of the
drill. And so on.
Materials for a Simple 5 gallon Biodiesel Processor
- 5-gallon (20-litre) oil drum, with a clamp-on steel "cinch ring" rim to secure the top (in the US, they're available
from army surplus)
- immersion heater
- electric drill (this one was discarded junk, it works perfectly)
- drill stand -- welded together from scrap 1-1/4" (3cm) angle iron (or similar) -- or a proper drill stand, if you're
lucky enough to have one
- temperature gauge (this one also came from a junk yard)
- paint stirrer to fit the drill
- female threaded fitting for the immersion heater
- Teflon plumbing tape (to seal the immersion heater fitting)
- 3/4" hardwood -- just a small piece, for the stirrer bush
- two 1-gallon (4-litre) oil cans
- 2- or 3-gallon container made of tough HDPE with two lids, for the methoxide
- aquarium air pump (this one was also junk -- Japanese junk is wonderful/appalling!)
- length of braided 1/2" vinyl hose
- length of 1/4 plastic tubing for the aquarium pump
- short length of 1/8" (4mm) copper piping
- tough epoxy resin
- silicon
Cost -- little or nothing, depending on what you can salvage, scavenge or
scrounge, but even if you buy everything you'll soon get your money back in saved fuel costs.
The drill stand
The drill stand is rigged from scrap 1-1/4" (3cm) angle iron and welded together, but it could just as easily be bolted (add 45-degree struts for
strength). We made two of them. The one in action with the biodiesel processor uses the tough plastic grip that came with the drill (see below).
We used a plug spanner to hold it in place, but any steel piping that fits snugly into the handle will do. Secure with two bolts, extra holes in
the plug spanner/piping mean you can move the drill in and out from the stand. The plug spanner is welded to a 5" (13cm) piece of angle iron
that's bolted to the inside of the stand upright -- one bolt on one side at the top, another on the other side at the bottom. Drill extra holes
in the stand upright so the height of the drill can be adjusted.
A clamp-on steel "cinch ring" rim secures the top. Replace the silicon seal inside the rim of the lid with fresh silicon if
needed. Apply the silicon and leave overnight until it's dry but still soft. Place the lid in position on top of the processor and clamp the
cinch ring in place: under pressure the silicon will take the right shape and form a perfect seal. Leave for a day.
Stirrer bush
The clip-on cap in the top of the biodiesel processor is fitted with a wooden bush cut from hardwood with a 6mm hole
drilled through it to take the stirrer shaft. Make it a tight-fitting hole, then heat a piece of the same steel rod as the stirrer and push it
carefully through the hole -- not too hot, just enough to scorch the surface of the wood inside the hole, not char it. Add a few drops of
biodiesel for lubrication. These clip-on oil can caps fit well, they're strong and air-tight. Cut a square hole in the cap the same size as the wooden
bush. Saw two shallow grooves on all four side of the bush, immediately above and below where it will fit the cap. Plug the bush into the
square hole. Secure on both sides with strong epoxy resin. Push the resin firmly into the grooves. When dry cover the resin with silicon.
Cut a hole in the inside plastic seal so that it fits snugly around the bush. In action, the bush is immediately lubricated by splash
oil, and the fit is tight enough to prevent fumes escaping from the biodiesel processor. The bush should last quite a long time, when it
starts to get worn it is easily replaced.
Extra lids
The 5-gallon oil can top comes with a single lid. We added two more. Cut the lids from the two 1-gallon (4-litre) oil cans, leaving about half an
inch of metal all around the lid. Cut two holes in the 5-gallon oil can top, slightly bigger than the lids. Fasten the new lids in place in the
top with pop rivets or self-threading screws: fit the new lids from the underside; sandwich a thin layer of epoxy resin between the upper surface
of the metal around the lid and the under surface of the top around the hole; seal both sides with silicon.
Fitting the heater
The heater is not only more powerful than necessary, it's also too long to fit across the 5-gallon can. So we put it in at an angle -- it starts
at about two-thirds the height of the can and angles down towards the bottom of the opposite side, fitting nicely. This meant making an angled
hole for the fitting -- save yourself the trouble, get a heater that fits! The fitting is silver-soldered in place and sealed with epoxy putty.
It's strong and it doesn't leak. The immersion heater element must always be completely immersed -- any uncovered portion could overheat and
cause a fire.
Adding the methoxide
You can use the easy method with HDPE carboys or similar containers with screw-on caps (preferably with bungs as well). First add the methanol,
then gradually add the lye. Swirl it about from side to side rather than shaking it up and down. Don't use it until all the lye is thoroughly
dissolved. If you use a white translucent HDPE container you can see any undissolved lye at the bottom of the container.
For the 5-gallon biodiesel processor we use a 3-gallon HDPE container with two screw-on caps and an aquarium air-pump to transfer the mixed
methoxide to the reactor vessel via a hose, with no exposure at all. Clean, safe and simple. We transfer the methanol to the HDPE container the
same way.
The braided 1/2" vinyl hose goes through a tight-fitting hole in the larger cap, sealed with epoxy resin on both sides, and down to the bottom of
the container. The other end fits through a hole in a clip-on oilcan cap, also sealed both sides with epoxy resin. This fits the third lid in the
biodiesel processor top.
The smaller cap on the HDPE container has a 1-1/2" (4cm) length of 1/8" (4mm) copper piping set into it to fit the other end of 1/4 plastic
tubing from the aquarium pump.
When the pump is switched on (with the biodiesel processor running) air fills the HDPE container, forcing the methoxide up the 1/2" hose and down
into the biodiesel processor. Once it starts flowing a syphon action takes over and the pump doesn't have to do much. It takes about two
minutes.
Using the processor
Use about 15 litres (4 US gallons) of WVO -- this leaves enough room for the methanol with some space on top. If electricity is expensive for
you, pre-heat the WVO in a separate container with a propane burner (we use a 20-litre stainless steel soup pot) and just use the electric
element to maintain the heat. Insulating the whole biodiesel processor with several layers of bubble-wrap keeps the heat in and saves on heating
costs.
If you do use the immersion heater to heat the oil, stir while heating to ensure that the oil doesn't get burned.
The 5-gallon biodiesel processor doesn't have a bottom drain, and doesn't really need one -- 4-5 gallons isn't heavy, instead of draining the
settled glycerine by-product and then the biodiesel from the bottom, it's easy enough to pour the biodiesel off from the top into another
container (another 5-gallon oil can). It might also be better -- the biodiesel doesn't take in any residual by-product still sticking to the
sides, which it might do if bottom-draining. Also, the "girth rib" about an inch from the top makes top draining quite precise -- pour slowly as
you get down towards the by-product, the first bit of by-product gathers in the rib and the remaining biodiesel flows over it. You can get nearly
all the biodiesel out this way without any by-product coming with it.
There's no exposure to methanol fumes doing it this way unless the weather's really hot. At normal room temperature the excess methanol doesn't
fume, vapour isn't a problem. If you're worried about it, make another clip-on lid assembly, like the one shown for transferring the methoxide,
with only a short stub of piping inside the lid, just enough to secure it tightly; use translucent hose and pour the biodiesel out via the hose.
The other end of the hose can be fixed to another clip-on cap fitted to whatever you're pouring it into. You'll see the dark glycerine by-product
starting to enter the pipe and be able to stop pouring in time. Pour the rest -- glycerine by-product and some residual biodiesel -- into a
by-product holding tank with a bottom drain and a tight lid. When it's nearly full drain off the glycerine and add the biodiesel floating on top
to the next wash.
Methanol condenser
This simple condenser is used for reclaiming the excess methanol from the raw glycerine by-product, where most of it collects. The methanol can
then be re-used in making the next batch of biodiesel.
Don't do it this way if you're planning to separate the glycerine by-product into its components of glycerine, FFAs and
catalyst, as the by-product won't separate without the methanol. After separation the excess methanol can be recovered from the separated
glycerine layer.
The condenser is made from 32" of 2" plastic water pipe with end-caps and 58" of 3/8" copper piping, held together with
plastic piping glue, epoxy resin and silicon. A cheap submersible aquarium water pump pumps cold water from a bucket through a 3/4" plastic hose
into the bottom of the condenser and out again at the top and back to the bucket via another hose.
The copper piping is not coiled: it goes in the top end-cap and straight through the plastic pipe, out of the bottom
end-cap and into the methanol collecting container. The top end of the copper pipe is curved round and down, the end sealed into a snap-on cap
that fits one of the lids in the 5-gallon processor. The condenser is held in place by two brackets adapted to fit the 5-gallon steel bucket.
The curved section of the copper pipe is insulated, to help the methanol vapour up and round the bend before condensing at the beginning of the
process when everything is still cool.
And that's all there is to it. It should recover about 3 litres of methanol from a 15-litre batch of raw by-product. The recovered methanol can
be used in making the next batch of biodiesel.
How it works
Put 15 litres of by-product in the biodiesel processor, fit the stirrer in position, secure the lid tightly with the cinch clamp. The snap-on cap
at the top end of the condenser snaps into place, the brackets support the condenser away from the biodiesel processor body.
Switch on the water pump, cold water circulates through the condenser and back into the bucket.
Switch on the immersion heater, and the stirrer. The stirrer isn't essential, but the 1.5kw heater is a bit strong and the stirrer keeps the heat
distributed.
Monitor the rising temperature on the temperature gauge in the lid.
Methanol starts to condense somewhere between 65 and 70 deg C (149-158 deg F), or perhaps a little higher. As the proportion of methanol in the
by-product mixture decreases, the boiling point of the mixture increases, so keep the heat on to keep it boiling.
The process ends up at just over 100 deg C (212 deg F), with about 3 litres of clear, reusable methanol in the collecting
tank. At higher temperatures it starts to froth and you have to stop or you'll get frothy brown by-product in your methanol condensate. But most
of the methanol should have been recovered by then.
See Also:
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