The Use of Evonik’s Catalysts to Manufacture Saturated Free Fatty Acids for Oleochemical Applications
Fully saturated free fatty acids are an important feedstock for the oleochemical industry. On an industrial scale, they can be obtained from triglycerides by two principally different manufacturing methods:
- Splitting of triglycerides into glycerin and unsaturated free fatty acids, followed by the full hydrogenation of the free fatty acids or
- Full hydrogenation of unsaturated triglycerides, followed by their splitting into glycerin and saturated free fatty acids.
Both routes have their own unique challenges and advantages, and each case requires a different type of catalyst. Evonik offers the right MONCAT® catalysts for either route.
In short, nickel soap formation leads to higher overall process costs and must, therefore, be minimized as much as possible. The following measures can help to achieve this:
- Use a nickel catalyst designed to impede nickel soap formation3,1 (e.g., MONCAT® 1991)
- Use higher hydrogen pressures3,7 to shift the equilibrium in Figure 2 to the left
- Keep the water content in the reactant free fatty acids as low as possible3,1
- Use lower temperatures during the highest hydrogen demand in batch reactors for maintaining an adequate hydrogen concentration on the nickel surface. The reaction temperature can be increased after peak hydrogen demand to bring the reaction to completion
- Continuous hydrogenation processes (e. g. loop reactors) should moderate hydrogen usage to maintain its nickel surface population by adjusting the free fatty acid feeding rate and the reaction temperature
- Reduce the amount of time the catalyst is suspended in free fatty acids without the presence of hydrogen. Some hydrogenation systems suspend the nickel catalyst in free fatty acids prior to introducing it to the reactor and this should be done quickly to minimize nickel soaps. Catalyst filtration after the reaction is also in the absence of hydrogen and should be done expeditiously.
In essence, the hydrogenation of free fatty acids is a race between reaction completion and catalyst deactivation2, which is why it is critical to start with the best nickel catalyst for free fatty acid survivability, namely MONCAT® 1991.
Evonik’s Oils and Fats Catalysts (OFC) along with their applications.
| Product | Ni wt.% | Applications |
| MONCAT® 1991 | > 21 wt.% | 1. Full and partial hydrogenation of free fatty acids 2. Dimer and monomer acids |
| MONCAT® 2021 | > 21 wt.% | Full and partial hydrogenation of triglycerides |
| MONCAT® 5191 | > 17 wt.% | Sulfided catalyst for the partial hydrogenation and isomerization of free fatty acids |
| MONCAT® 4181 | > 17 wt.% | Sulfided catalyst for the partial hydrogenation and isomerization of triglycerides |
Please contact your local representatives for more details.
Sources:
[1] D.J. Anneken, S. Both, R. Christoph, G. Fieg, U. Steinberner, and A. Westfechtel, in Ullmann’s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, “Fatty Acids”, Wiley-VCH Verlaf GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim (2012).
[2] R.C. Hastert,” Hydrogenation of Fatty Acids”, J. Am. Oil Chemists’ Soc., Vol. 56 (November 1979)
[3] H.B.W. Patterson, “Hydrogenation of Fats and Oils: Theory and Practice”, AOCS Press (2009).
[4] R. D. O’Brien, “Fats and Oils: formulating and processing for applications”, 3rd ed., CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group (2009).
[5] R. F. Ariaansz, “Hydrogenation in Practice”, AOCS Lipid Library.