Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock

The growing awareness concerning the environmental issues of energy supply and usage have recently been the topic of interest in research. Among the various alternative energy discovered, biodiesel is one of the promising blended fuel to substitute petroleum derived diesel which offers friendly and...

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Main Authors: Intan Shafinaz, Abd Manaf, Gaanty Pragas, Maniam
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/1/Waste_Marine_Barnacles_as_Solid_Catalyst_for_Methyl_Ester_Preparation_Using_Catfish_%28Pangasius%29_Fat_as_Feedstock.pdf
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/2/fist-2014-shafinaz-Waste_Marine_Barnacles_pg1.pdf
id ump-8551
recordtype eprints
spelling ump-85512018-02-28T02:46:27Z http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/ Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock Intan Shafinaz, Abd Manaf Gaanty Pragas, Maniam Q Science (General) The growing awareness concerning the environmental issues of energy supply and usage have recently been the topic of interest in research. Among the various alternative energy discovered, biodiesel is one of the promising blended fuel to substitute petroleum derived diesel which offers friendly and sustainable environment. Boey et al, 2011; Boey et al, 2009; nakatani et al, 2009 and Obadiah et al, 2012 revealed that many type of heterogeneous catalyst from waste, such as waste egg, crab and oyster shells; bone and ash. Barnacle is successful creatures with abundant and diverse populations. Scientists have identified about 1445 living species of which 900 are barnacle. Their abundance can create serious and expensive fouling problems on ship bottoms, buoys and pilings. Astachov et al, 2011 state that, in less than two years, 10 tons of barnacle can become attached to a tanker. In the present work, the transesterification catfish fat using barnacles as a catalyst was attempted. 2014 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/1/Waste_Marine_Barnacles_as_Solid_Catalyst_for_Methyl_Ester_Preparation_Using_Catfish_%28Pangasius%29_Fat_as_Feedstock.pdf application/pdf en http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/2/fist-2014-shafinaz-Waste_Marine_Barnacles_pg1.pdf Intan Shafinaz, Abd Manaf and Gaanty Pragas, Maniam (2014) Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock. In: Malaysia International Biological Symposium (i-SIMBIOMAS 2014), 28-29 October 2014 , Kuala Lumpur. pp. 1-3.. (Unpublished)
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution Universiti Malaysia Pahang
building UMP Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
language English
English
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Intan Shafinaz, Abd Manaf
Gaanty Pragas, Maniam
Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock
description The growing awareness concerning the environmental issues of energy supply and usage have recently been the topic of interest in research. Among the various alternative energy discovered, biodiesel is one of the promising blended fuel to substitute petroleum derived diesel which offers friendly and sustainable environment. Boey et al, 2011; Boey et al, 2009; nakatani et al, 2009 and Obadiah et al, 2012 revealed that many type of heterogeneous catalyst from waste, such as waste egg, crab and oyster shells; bone and ash. Barnacle is successful creatures with abundant and diverse populations. Scientists have identified about 1445 living species of which 900 are barnacle. Their abundance can create serious and expensive fouling problems on ship bottoms, buoys and pilings. Astachov et al, 2011 state that, in less than two years, 10 tons of barnacle can become attached to a tanker. In the present work, the transesterification catfish fat using barnacles as a catalyst was attempted.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Intan Shafinaz, Abd Manaf
Gaanty Pragas, Maniam
author_facet Intan Shafinaz, Abd Manaf
Gaanty Pragas, Maniam
author_sort Intan Shafinaz, Abd Manaf
title Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock
title_short Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock
title_full Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock
title_fullStr Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock
title_full_unstemmed Waste Marine Barnacles as Solid Catalyst for Methyl Ester Preparation Using Catfish (Pangasius) Fat as Feedstock
title_sort waste marine barnacles as solid catalyst for methyl ester preparation using catfish (pangasius) fat as feedstock
publishDate 2014
url http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/1/Waste_Marine_Barnacles_as_Solid_Catalyst_for_Methyl_Ester_Preparation_Using_Catfish_%28Pangasius%29_Fat_as_Feedstock.pdf
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/8551/2/fist-2014-shafinaz-Waste_Marine_Barnacles_pg1.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T22:06:15Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T22:06:15Z
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