Title of Invention

PROCESS FOR PRODUCING A SATURATED HYDROCARBON COMPONENT

Abstract The invention relates to a process for producing high-quality saturated base oil or a base oil component based on hydrocarbons. The process of the invention comprises two main steps, the oligomerization and deoxygenation. A biological starting material containing unsaturated carboxylic acids and/or esters of carboxylic acids is preferably used as the feedstock.
Full Text Process for producing a saturated hydrocarbon component
Technical field
The invention relates to a process based on oligomerization and deoxygenation for
producing a hydrocarbon component, and particularly for producing high-quality
saturated base oil. In the process feedstock of biological origin is preferably
utilized, eventually derived from plant and fish oils, animal fats, natural waxes,
carbohydrates and corresponding synthetic materials and combinations thereof.
Prior art
Base oils are commonly used for the production of lubricants, such as lubricating
oils for automotives, industrial lubricants and lubricating greases. They are also
used as process oils, white oils and metal working oils. Finished lubricants consist
of two general components, lubricating base oil and additives. Lubricating base
oil is the major constituent in these finished lubricants and contributes
significantly to the properties of the finished lubricant. In general, a few
lubricating base oils are used to manufacture a wide variety of finished lubricants
by varying the mixtures of individual lubricating base oils and individual
additives.
Base oils according to the classification of the American Petroleum Institute (API)
Group III or IV are used in high-quality lubricants. API base oil classification is
shown in Table 1.



Oils of the Group III are base oils with very high viscosity indices (VHVI)
produced by modern methods from crude oil by hydrocracking, followed by
isomerization of the waxy linear paraffins to give branched paraffins. Oils of
Group HI also include base oils produced from Slack Wax paraffins from mineral
oils, and from waxes obtained by Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (GTL waxes), for
instance from coal or natural gas using corresponding isomerization techniques.
Oils of Group IV are synthetic polyalphaolefins (PAO). A similar classification is
also used by ATTEL (Association Technique de l'Industrie Europeenne des
Lubrifiants, or Technical Association of the European Lubricants Industry), said
classification also comprising Group VI: Polyinternalolefins (PIO). In addition to
the official classification, also Group II+ is commonly used in this field, this
group comprising saturated and non-sulfurous base oils having viscosity indices
of more than 110, but below 120. In these classifications saturated hydrocarbons
include paraffinic and naphthenic compounds, but not aromatics.
There is also available a definition for base stocks according to API 1509 as: "A
base stock is a lubricant component that is produced by a single manufacturer to
the same specifications (independent of feed source or manufacturer's location);
that meets the same manufacturer's specification; and that is identified by a unique
formula, product identification number, or both. Base stocks may be
manufactured using a variety of different processes." Base oil is the base stock or
blend of base stocks used in API-licensed oil. The known base stock types are 1)
Mineral oil (paraffinic, naphthenic, aromatic), 2) Synthetic (polyalphaolefins,

alkylated aromatics, diesters, polyol esters, polyalkylene glycols, phosphate
esters, silicones), and 3) Plant oil.
Already for a long time, especially the automotive industry has required lubricants
and thus base oils with improved technical properties. Increasingly, the
specifications for finished lubricants require products with excellent low
temperature properties, high oxidation stability and low volatility. Generally
lubricating base oils are base oils having kinematic viscosity of about 3 cSt or
greater at 100 °C (KV100); pour point (PP) of about -12 °C or less; and viscosity
index (VI) about 120 or greater. In addition to low pour points also the low-
temperature fluidity of multi-grade engine oils is needed to guarantee that in cold
weather the engine starts easily. The low-temperature fluidity is demonstrated as
apparent viscosity in cold cranking simulator tests at -5 to -40 °C temperature.
Lubricating base oils having KV100 of about 4 cSt should typically have CCS
viscosity at -30 °C (CCS-30) lower than 1800 and oils having KV100 of about 5
cSt should have CCS-30 lower than 2700. The lower the value is the better. In
general, lubricating base oils should have a Noack volatility no greater than
current conventional Group I or Group II light neutral oils. Currently, only a small
fraction of the base oils manufactured today are able to meet these demanding
specifications.
It is no longer possible to produce lubricants complying with the specifications of
the most demanding car manufacturers from conventional mineral oils. Typically,
mineral oils often contain too high concentrations of aromatic, sulfur, and
nitrogen compounds, and further, they also have a high volatility and a modest
viscosity index, that is, viscosity-temperature dependence. Moreover, response of
mineral oils to antioxidant additives is often low. Synthetic and so-called semi-
synthetic base oils play an increasingly important role especially in automotive
lubricants, such as in engine and gear oils. A similar development can be seen for
industrial lubricants. Service life of lubricants is desirably as long as possible, thus
avoiding-frequent oil changes by the user, and further allowing extended

maintenance intervals of vehicles for instance in commercial transportation. In the
past decade; engine oil change intervals for passenger cars have increased five
fold, being at best 50,000 km. For heavy-duty vehicles, engine oil change
intervals are at present already on the level of 100,000 km.
The production of lubricants is influenced by increasingly common "Life Cycle
Approach" (LCA) concerning environment, health and safety factors of the
product. What is aimed with LCA are an extended service life of the product, and
minimal drawbacks to the environments associated with the production, use,
handling and disposal of the product. Longer oil change intervals of high-quality
base oils result in decreased consumption of non-renewable mineral crude oil
based raw materials, and lower amounts of hazardous waste oil products.
In addition to the demands for engine technology and base oil production, also
strict environmental requirements direct the industry to develop more
sophisticated base oils. Sulfur free fuels and base oils are required in order to gain
full effect of new and efficient anti-pollution technologies in modern vehicles and
to cut emissions of nitrogen oxides, volatile hydrocarbons and particles, as well as
to achieve direct reduction of sulfur dioxide in exhaust gases. The European
Union has decided that these fuels shall be available to the market from 2005 and
they must be the only form on sale from 2009. Conventional mineral oil base oils
contain sulfur, nitrogen, aromatic compounds, and typically also volatile
compounds. They are less suitable for new engines and thus also environmentally
more detrimental than newer sulfur and aromatic free base oils.
Nowadays, the use of recycled oils and renewable raw materials in the production
of lubricants is frequently an object of interest. The use of renewable raw
materials of biological origin instead of non-renewable fossil raw materials to
produce hydrocarbon components is desirable, because the fossil raw materials
are exhaustible and their effect on environment is detrimental. Problems
associated with recycled oils include complicated purification and reprocessing

steps to obtain base oils with high quality. Further, the development of a
functioning and extensive recycling logistic system is expensive.
For the time being, only esters are used in lubricants of renewable and biological
origin. The use of esters is limited to a few special applications such as oils for
refrigeration compressor lubricants, bio-hydraulic oils and metal working oils. In
normal automotive and industrial lubricants, they are used mainly in additive
scale. High price also limit the use of esters In addition, the esters used in engine
oil formulations are not interchangeable with other esters without performing new
engine tests, even in cases where the chemical composition of the substituting
ester is in principle totally similar. Instead, base oils consisting of pure
hydrocarbon structure are partly interchangeable with each other. There are also
some technical problems associated with esters. As polar compounds, esters
suffer greater seal-swelling tendency than pure hydrocarbons. This has created lot
of problems relating to elastomers in hydraulic applications. In addition, ester
base oils are hydrolyzed more easily producing acids, which in turn cause
corrosion on lubricating systems. Further, even greater disadvantage of esters is
that additives developed for non-polar hydrocarbon base oils are not effective for
ester base oils.
Processes wherein triglycerides are cross-linked in a controlled manner using a
suitable metal salt or peroxide initiator, which readily capture hydrogen from the
C-H bond, together with suitable amounts of oxygen are known in the art. Some
cross-linking is also caused by atmospheric oxygen without heating the product,
the reaction being, however, slower. This cross-linking is based on oxygen-
oxygen bonds formed in the molecules. During cross-linking of the triglycerides,
the degree of cross-linking may be controlled by means of processing time and
kinematic viscosity. The viscosity increases with cross-linking as a function of
time, and decreases as the product decomposes.

Also a thermal batch process based on reactions of double bonds for producing
stand oil from triglycerides is known, with carbon dioxide being introduced to the
reactor for preventing oxidation. In this case, cross-linking is based on the carbon-
carbon bonds being formed in the molecules. The decomposition products of the
thermal reaction are removed by entrainment with the carbon dioxide gas stream,
or alternatively using vacuum. Cross-linking is an exothermal reaction and
accordingly, both efficient heating for providing the reaction and efficient cooling
to prevent overheating of the product is necessary to maintain the temperature
between 280 and 300 °C. Moreover, the reaction vessel must be quickly cooled
after reaching the desired viscosity, indicating the degree of cross-linking.
In Kirk-Othmer: Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 3rd Ed., vol. 7, Dimer
acids, p. 768 a method is presented for producing dimeric acids from unsaturated
carboxylic acids with a radical reaction using a cationic catalyst, the reaction
temperature being 230 °C. In addition to acyclic branched, unsaturated dimeric
acid as the main product also mono and bicyclic dimers are formed.
Unsaturated alcohols may be oligomerized in a similar manner as unsaturated
carboxylic acids using heat and/or catalyst to give alcohol dimers. An acyclic
unsaturated branched diol dimer is the main product.
In Koster R.M. et al., Journal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical 134 (1998) 159
- 169, oligomerization of carboxylic acids, carboxylic acid methyl esters, and
synthetic alcohols and olefins is described, yielding corresponding dimers.
The cross-linked triglyceride, carboxylic acid methyl ester dimer, carboxylic acid
dimer, and fatty alcohol dimer products may be used in lubricant applications, but
since the products contain heteroatoms, they are endowed with corresponding
weaknesses as the base oils derived from esters.

Processes wherein the oxygen of a carboxylic acid or ester is removed are also
known. Decarboxylation of fatty acids results in hydrocarbons with one carbon
atom less than the original molecule. The feasibility of decarboxylation varies
greatly with the type of carboxylic acid used as the starting material. Activated
carboxylic acids containing electron-attracting substituents in the position alpha or
beta with respect to the carboxylic group lose carbon dioxide spontaneously at
slightly elevated temperatures. In this case, the RC-COOH bond is weakened by
the electron shift along the carbon chain.
With other types of carboxylic acids, the hydrocarbon chain brings about an
opposite increase of the electron density at alpha carbon, and thus, cleavage of
carbon dioxide is difficult. A suitable catalyst contributes to the reaction. In
Maier, W.F. et a)., Chemische Berichte (1982), 115(2), 808-812, hydrocarbons are
produced from carboxylic acids using heterogeneous N1/Al2O3 and Pd/SiO2
catalysts at 180 °C under hydrogen atmosphere.
Combined decarboxylation and hydrodeoxygenation of oxygen containing
compounds is disclosed in Laurent, E., Delmon, B.: Applied Catalysis, A: General
(1994), 109(1), 77-96, and 97-115, wherein pyrolysis oils derived from biomass
were subjected to hydrodeoxygenation using sulfurized CoMo/γ-Al2O3 and
NiMo/γ-Al2O3 catalysts at 260 - 300 °C, under a hydrogen pressure of 7 MPa.
Reactions of hydrodeoxygenation step are highly exothermal, and require high
amounts of hydrogen.
FI100248 presents a process with two steps wherein middle distillate is produced
from plant oil by hydrogenation of the carboxylic acids or triglycerides of the
plant oil to yield linear normal paraffins, followed by isomerization of said n-
paraffins to give branched paraffins. Conditions of this hydrogen treatment
include a temperature between 330 and 450 °C, a pressure of 3 MPa, and a liquid
hourly space velocity (LHSV) of 0.5 - 5 1/h. In the iosomerization step a

temperature between 200 and 500 °C under pressure higher than atmospheric and
LHSV of 0.1 - 101/h were used.
In isomerization processes, noble metal catalysts that are very expensive and
highly sensitive to catalyst poisons are used. Starting materials from biological
sources contain high amounts of oxygen yielding water, carbon monoxide, and
carbon dioxide as the starting material is processed. In addition, said starting
materials of biological origin often contain nitrogen, sulfur and phosphorus
compounds known as catalyst poisons and inhibitors of noble metal catalysts.
They cause decreased service life of the catalyst, and make frequent regeneration
of the catalysts necessary unless removed prior to isomerization process.
Typical basic structural unit of plant and fish oils and animal fats is a triglyceride.
Triglyceride is an ester of glycerol with three fatty acid molecules having the
structure below:
wherein R1, R2 and R3 represent C4-C30 hydrocarbon chains. Fatty acids are
carboxylic acids having long unbranched hydrocarbon chains. Lengths of the
hydrocarbon chains are mainly 18 carbons (C18). C18 fatty acids are typically
bonded to the middle hydroxyl group of glyceroL Typical carbon numbers of the
fatty acids linked to the two other hydroxyl groups are even, being between
carbon numbers C14 and C22.
Fatty acid composition of the starting material of biological origin may
considerably vary among feedstocks from different sources. While several double
bonds may be present in fatty acids, they are non-conjugated, but at least one

intermediate -CH2- unit is between them. With respect to configuration, the
double bonds of natural fatty acids are of cis form, hydrogen atoms being thus
located on the same side of the rather rigid double bond. As the number of the
double bonds increase, they are generally located at the free end of the chain.
Lengths of hydrocarbon chains and numbers of double bonds depend on the
various plant or animal fats or waxes serving as the source of the fatty acid.
Animal fats typically contain more saturated fatty acids than unsaturated fatty
acids. Fatty acids of fish oil contain high amounts of double bonds, and the
average length of the hydrocarbon chains is higher compared to fatty acids of
plant oils and animal fats. Fatty acid composition play an important role in the
evaluation of the oxidation resistance, thermal resistance, and low temperature
properties of the feedstock subjected to oligomerization, and further, the type of
oligomerization products.
Waxes are mainly carboxylic acids esterified with alcohols having long chains.
Moreover, waxes contain varying amounts of paraffins (n-alkanes), ketones, and
diketones, primary and secondary alcohols, aldehydes, alkane acids (carboxylic
acids), and terpenes. Carbon numbers of said carboxylic acid and alcohol chains
are typically between C12 and C38.
Prior to processing, starting materials of biological origin are commonly
pretreated with any suitable known methods such as thermally, mechanically for
instance by means of shear forces, chemically for instance with acids or bases, or
physically with radiation, distillation, cooling, or filtering. The purpose of said
chemical and physical pretreatments is to remove impurities interfering with the
process or poisoning the catalysts, and reduce unwanted side reactions.
In a hydrolysis treatment, oils and fats react with water yielding free fatty acids
and glycerol as the product. Three main processes for the industrial production of
fatty acids are known: vapour splitting of triglycerides under high pressure, basic
hydrolysis, and enzymatic hydrolysis. In the vapour splitting process, the

hydrolysis of triglycerides using steam is carried out at temperatures between 100
and 300 °C, under a pressure of 1 - 10 MPa, preferable conditions being from 250
to 260 °C and from 4 to 5.5 MPa. Metal oxides like zinc oxide may be added as
the catalyst to accelerate the reaction. High temperature and pressure contribute to
the dissolution of fats in water.
Paraffinic synthetic base oils produced by oligomerization are known in the art,
the typical ones being PAO (polyalphaolefins) and PIO (polyinternal olefins). In
the production thereof, olefinic starting materials from crude oil are used, said
starting materials containing no heteroatoms. The development of base oils of the
polyalphaolefin type was started in the 1930's both in the USA and in Germany
where mainly products with superior low temperature properties suitable for
aircrafts were developed. 1-alkene monomers to be used as starting materials for
PAO are typically produced from ethylene. For commercial PAOs, C8-C12 alpha
olefins or C14-C18 alpha olefins are primarily used as starting materials. In the
production of PAO, the monomer is polymerized thermally or using catalysts of
the Ziegler or Friedel-Crafts type, or using zeolite catalysts to give heavier
products, followed by distillation to obtain desired product fractions, and
hydrogenated to give saturated paraffins. It is possible to produce PAO products
belonging to various viscosity classes, the typical representatives having
kinematic viscosities of 2, 4, 6 and 8 mm2/s at 100 °C (KV100). Moreover,
particularly thick base oils PAO40 and PAO100 having KV100 values of 40 and
100 mm2/s are produced, said base oils being generally used for the production of
thick lubricants, and as viscosity index improvers (VII). PAO products have high
viscosity indices, and at the same time, excellent low temperature properties, pour
points being as low as -60 °C. Because lighter monomeric compounds are
removed by distillation, the volatilities of the products are low and flash points are
high. Oxidation resistance is quite modest without antioxidanTadditives.
PIOs are produced by oligomerizing internal olefins, the double bonds of which
are statistically distributed along the whole length of the hydrocarbon chain.

Internal olefins may be produced by dehydrogenating n-paraffines derived from
crude oil. Molecular structures of the products produced from internal C15-C16
linear olefins differ from that of PAO. In comparison to PAO, the properties of
PIO are poorer; the viscosity index is lower, pour point is poorer, and volatility is
higher. Considering quality, PIOs lie between PAO and VHVL The production
technology for PIO is similar to that for PAO, with the exception of a more
aggressive catalytic system for the oligomerization of the less reactive internal
olefins. Solubility of additives in PAO and PIO is rather poor due to lacking
polarity. Esters are often used in formulations to improve solubility.
The use of starting materials of biological origin containing heteroatoms has so far
not been reported or intermediates optionally thermally and/or chemically and/or
physically and/or mechanically treated, in the production of high-quality saturated
base oils.
On the basis of the above teaching, it may be seen that there is an obvious need
for a new alternative process for producing hydrocarbon components preferably
from starting materials of biological origin, and to avoid problems associated with
prior art solutions or at least substantially reduce them. There is also a need for
nonpolar saturated base oils complying with the quality requirements for high-
quality base oils, said base oil being preferably of biological origin and having
more preferable effects on the environment and for end users than traditional
mineral base oils. In addition, there is a need for a process based on the use of
renewable feedstocks, thus saving non-renewable raw materials.
Objects of the invention
An object of the invention is a process for producing a saturated hydrocarbon
component.

A further object of the invention is a process for producing a saturated
hydrocarbon component wherein starting materials of biological origin are used.
Another object of the invention is a process for producing a new type of base oils.
Still another object of the invention is a process for producing saturated base oils
not containing heteroatoms from starting materials of biological origin.
Further, another object of the invention is a process for producing saturated diesel
component and gasoline components not containing heteroatoms from starting
materials of biological origin.
An object of the invention is moreover a base oil complying with the requirements
of the API Group IE.
The characteristic features of the process, and base oils of the invention are
presented in the appended claims.
General description of the invention
The process of the invention comprises an oligomerization step wherein the
molecules of the feedstock reacts with each other, thus increasing the carbon
number of the component obtained, and further, a deoxygenation step. Said
deoxygenation may be carried out either as hydrodeoxygenation reaction or
decarboxylation/decarbonylation reactions. In addition, the process of the
invention may also comprise an optional isomerization step for isomerization of
the lighter products, and/or a finishing step. The feedstock for the process is
preferably from biological origin.
In this context, oligomerization refers to dimerization, trimerization and
tetramerization reactions, as well as polymerization and cross-linking reactions.

The oligomerization step of the process of the invention is performed to extend
hydrocarbon chain of unsaturated carboxylic acids and/or derivatives thereof, such
as esters, anhydrides and alcohols from a monomeric unit to give a dimer with
two monomeric units, and to higher oligomers. In this oligomerization reaction,
double bonds of the components react with each other under the influence of heat
and/or a catalyst
Carboxylic acids and derivatives thereof also include here fatty acids and
derivatives thereof Carbon number of carboxylic acids and derivatives thereof is
at least C4. Fatty acids of biological origin and/or derivatives thereof are
preferably used.
Deoxygenation refers here to removal of oxygen either by hydrodeoxygenation or
by decarboxylation/decarbonylation reaction. In the deoxygenation, the structure
of the biological starting material will be converted to be either paraffinic or
olefinic, according to the catalyst and reaction conditions used.
In this context, hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) refers to removal of oxygen by means
of hydrogen. Water is liberated in the reaction when esters, alcohols, anhydrides
or carboxylic acid groups are decomposed. All oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and
sulfur atoms are removed.
Decarboxylation refers here to the removal of oxygen as carbon dioxide, and
decarbonylation refers to the removal of oxygen as carbon monoxide.
In this context, isomerization refers to hydroisomerization of linear hydrocarbons
(paraffins) resulting in a branched structure.
The term "saturated hydrocarbon", used in the specification refers to paraffinic
and naphthenic compounds, but not to aromatics. Paraffinic compounds may
either be branched or linear. Naphthenic compounds are cyclic saturated

hydrocarbons, i.e cycloparaffins. Such a hydrocarbon with a cyclic structure is
typically derived from cyclopentane or cyclohexane. A naphthem'c compound
may comprise a single ring structure (mononaphthene) or two isolated ring
structures (isolated dinaphthene), or two fused ring structures (fused dinaphthene)
or three or more fused ring structures (polycyclic naphthenes or polynaphthenes).
Saturated base oils comprise here saturated hydrocarbons.
Carboxylic acids marked for example C18:l means C18 chain with one double
bond.
In this context, pressures are gauge pressures relative to normal atmospheric
pressure.
Classification of the periodic table of the elements is the IUPAC classification.
In this context, width of carbon number range refers to the difference of the
carbon numbers of the largest and the smallest molecules, plus one, in the final
product.
The invention is now illustrated with the appended figure 1 without wishing to
limit the scope of the invention to the embodiment of said figure.
Figure
Figure 1 shows a preferable embodiment of the process according to the
invention. One or more feedstock(s) selected from the group consisting of:
triglyceride feed stream 1, fatty acid feed stream 2, feed stream 3 of the esters of
fatty acids with alcohols having short chains, fatty acid anhydride stream 4, and
fatty alcohol stream 6, are introduced to the oligomerization reactor 10 either as
separate components or as mixtures. Part of the lighter product fraction to be

recycled (e.g. 52), or the hydrocarbon stream 201 may be optionally introduced to
the oligomerization reactor 10 as a diluent. Diluent stream 202 comprises the
recycled stream 52, or the hydrocarbon stream 201, or a mixture thereof. Product
11 containing components of the feedstock reacted at double bonds, and hydrogen
as stream 7 are passed from the oligomerization reactor 10 to an optional
prehydrogenation reactor 20 optionally also receiving a diluent stream 202. The
product hydrogenated at double bonds from the prehydrogenation reactor 20 is
passed as stream 21, and hydrogen is optionally passed as stream 7 to a
deoxygenation reactor 30 optionally also receiving a diluent 202. In case
deoxygenation is performed as decarboxylation/decarbonylation reaction, a
mixture of hydrogen 7 and an inert gas e.g. nitrogen may be used as the gas
stream (not shown in the figure). The product containing saturated hydrocarbons
from the deoxygenation reactor 30 is passed as stream 31 to a distillation and/or
separation unit 40 for separation of various product fractions, gas 44, gasoline 43,
diesel 42, and base oil 41. Lighter gasoline and diesel fractions, respectively 43
and 42, are optionally isomerized in hydroisomerization unit 50 in the presence of
hydrogen 7, thus yielding gasoline and diesel streams, respectively 51 and 52,
containing branched hydrocarbons.
In case particularly fatty acids 2 and/or fatty acid esters 3 and/or fatty alcohols 6
are oligomerized, the product stream 12 may be withdrawn from the
oligomerization reactor 10 followed by separation of the non-oligomerized
components for instance by distillation 60. Light non-oligomerized components
are recycled back to the oligomerization reactor 10 as the stream 61, and the
oligomerized components may be passed to prehydrogenation 20 as the stream 62.
In recycling, the stream 63 from distillation 69 may be passed to low temperature
filtering 80 wherein saturated components 81 are separated from components 82
having double bonds to be passed to oligomerization 10. Alternatively, the
distillate 61 may be passed to post-oligomerization reactor 70, in which
unsaturated carboxylic acids 8 with smaller molecules, or olefins 5 may be
introduced for branching linear non-oligomerized unsaturated components. The

product containing components of the feedstock reacted at double bonds is passed
from the post-oligomerization reactor 70 as the stream 71 to an optional
prehydrogenation reactor 20.
Detailed description of the invention
It was now surprisingly found that with the process of the invention comprising
oligomerization and deoxygenation steps and an optional isomerization step, high-
quality hydrocarbon components and particularly saturated base oils may be
produced from unsaturated carboxylic acids containing heteroatoms, and from
derivatives thereof, particularly from fatty acids, fatty acid esters, fatty alcohols,
respective fatty acid anhydrides of biological origin, and/or mixtures thereof. The
problems of the prior art processes and products obtained therewith may be
avoided, or at least substantially reduced by means of the process of the invention.
In the process of the invention, especially oligomerization reactions of materials
of biological origin may be utilized in combination with deoxygenation reaction
for the production of saturated base oils in a novel manner. For the
oligomerization of unsaturated carboxylic acids and/or derivatives thereof, such as
fatty acids, fatty acid esters, fatty alcohols, fatty acid anhydrides, and/or mixtures
thereof, the monomers are converted into dimers with two monomers and into
higher oligomers. In case starting materials of biological origin are used for the
production of .base oils, it is necessary to extend the hydrocarbon chain length to
reach the carbon number range required in the base oil applications, leaving only
carbon-carbon bonds in the main structure of the molecule. According to the
invention, this is carried out by allowing the compounds having double bonds to
react with each other, thus producing desired carbon-carbon bonds, and further,
yielding hydrocarbons with carbon numbers in the range from C18 to C550. In
base oil applications, the carbon number range is typically from C18 to C76, and
particularly the carbon number range of thick base oils may even be from C150 to
C550. In the oligomerization reaction, for instance double bonds of the

triglyceride molecules react with each other, thus forming a polymeric triglyceride
network. With other feedstocks, mainly dimers,trimers, and tetramers are formed.
In case the feedstock contains polyunsaturated hydrocarbon chains, after
oligomerization and deoxygenation, greater amounts of trimers and hydrocarbons
with ring structure are obtained than with monounsaturated hydrocarbon chains.
In the process of the invention, the feedstock of biological and/or synthetic origin
is oligomerized and deoxygenated. The oligomerization of unsaturated feedstock
components is preferably performed first, followed by deoxygenation to obtain
saturated paraffins without heteroatoms. Alternatively, the unsaturated feedstock
is first subjected to deoxygenation to remove heteroatoms, followed by
oligomerization of the obtained olefinic product, the deoxygenation being,
however, then carried out by decarboxylation or decarbonylation reaction, since
the hydrodeoxygenation reaction is in this case unsuitable.
Following deoxygenation, the process may also comprise an optional
isomerization of the lighter components. Linear normal paraffins having shorter
chains, not belonging to the base oil carbon class, and produced as by-products of
the process, may be isomerized to introduce branches to the hydrocarbon chain
improving the cold flow properties of the product. These isomerized products may
be used for instance as gasoline or diesel components, and further, components
having carbon numbers from C18 to C24 may also be used as light base oil
components.
The process may further comprise an optional prehydrogenation step prior to
deoxygenation, an optional post oligomerization step following the actual
oligomerization step, optional purification steps of the intermediates, recycling
steps of the products, and a finishing step. Feedstocks may optionally be subjected
to one or more pretreatment step(s), for example purification.

Feedstock
In the process of the invention, the feed comprises one or more components)
selected from the group consisting of triglycerides, carboxylic acids having
carbon numbers from C4 to C38, esters of C4 to C38 carboxylic acids and Cl-
Cl 1 alcohols, C4-C38 carboxylic acid anhydrides, and C4-C38 alcohols. The
feedstock is preferably selected from the group consisting of triglycerides, fatty
- acids having carbon numbers from C4 to C24, esters of C12 to C24 fatty acids and
C1-C3 alcohols, C12-C24 fatty acid anhydrides, and C12-C24 fatty alcohols, and
mixtures thereof. The feedstock preferably originates from starting materials of
biological origin, or mixtures thereof.
Suitable starting materials of biological origin are selected from the group
consisting of:
a) plant fats, plant oils, plant waxes; animal fats, animal oils, animal waxes; fish
fats, fish oils, fish waxes, and mixtures thereof, and
b) free fatty acids or fatty acids obtained by hydrolysis, acid transesterification or
pyrolysis reactions from plant fats, plant oils, plant waxes, animal fats, animaT
oils, animal waxes, fish fats, fish oils, fish waxes, and mixtures thereof, and
c) esters obtained by transesterification from plant fats, plant oils, plant waxes,
animal fats, animal oils, animal waxes, fish fats, fish oils, fish waxes, and
mixtures thereof, and
d) esters obtained by esterification of free fatty acids of plant, animal and fish
origin with alcohols, and mixtures thereof, and
e) fatty alcohols obtained as reduction products of fatty acids from plant fats,
plant oils, plant waxes, animal fats, animal oils, animal waxes, fish fats, fish
oils, fish waxes, and mixtures thereof, and
f) waste and recycled food grade fats and oils, and fats, oils and waxes obtained
by genetic engineering, and mixtures thereof, and
g) mixtures of said starting materials.

In this context, plants and animals also include algae and insects, respectively.
The starting material of biological origin may also contain free carboxylic acids
and/or esters of carboxylic acids, or oligomerization products of biological
starting materials, without substantially interfering with the process. Suitable
feedstocks are also all compound types mentioned that are produced either totally
or partly synthetically.
Since the purpose of the process is the oligomerization of components having
double bonds, the feedstock preferably contains at least 50 %, and more
preferably at least 80 %, by weight, of unsaturated and/or polyunsaturated
compounds. The unsaturated compound is preferably a monounsaturated
component, particularly preferably a C16:l and/or C18:l component present in
the feedstock in concentrations of above 40 %, and preferably above 70 %, by
weight.
Examples of suitable biological starting materials include fish oils such as baltic
herring oil, salmon oil, herring oil, tuna oil, anchovy oil, sardine oil, and mackerel
oil; plant oils such as rapeseed oil, colza oil, canola oil, tall oil, sunflower seed oil,
soybean oil, corn oil, hemp oil, olive oil, cottonseed oil, mustard oil, palm oil,
peanut oil, castor oil, jatropha seed oil, palm kernel oil, and coconut oil; and
moreover, suitable are also animal fats such as lard, tallow, and also waste and
recycled food grade fats and oils, as well as fats, waxes and oils produced by
genetic engineering. In addition to fats and oils, suitable starting materials of
biological origin include animal waxes such as bee wax, Chinese wax (insect
wax), shellac wax, and lanoline (wool wax), as well as plant waxes such as
carnauba palm wax, ouricouri palm wax, jojoba seed oil, candelilla wax, esparto
wax, Japan wax, and rice bran oil.
The process may also be used for processing mixtures of feedstocks of biological
origin, and synthetic feedstocks, using additional feedstocks produced with other
processes, or synthetic feedstocks, if necessary, suitable for the process step in

question. Also pure synthetic feedstocks are suitable, but in this case, the products
are not based on renewable natural resources.
If desired, also linear olefins and olefins having ring structures, preferably C2-
C14 olefins, may also be added in the feedstock, thus allowing for the increase of
the molecular mass with lower carbon numbers than typical C12-C24 carboxylic
acids. Components of the turpentine fraction of tall oil such as alpha pinene,
and/or compounds having double bonds derived from sugars, and/or unsaturated
compounds produced from carboxylic acids via metathesis, and/or synthetic
compounds such as ethylene or propylene may be used as suitable additional
olefinic components.
In the oligomerization, also unsaturated dicaboxylic acids having shorter chains
( feedstocks, allowing for the increase of the molecular mass with lower carbon
than typical C12-C24 carboxylic acids, or derivatives of carboxylic acids. Suitable
unsaturated dicarboxylic acids include maleic acid, fumaric acid, citraconic acid,
mesaconic acid, itaconic acid, 2-methylene glutaric acid, and muconic acid.
In the optional post-oligomerization reaction of the invention, for instance above
molecules having short chains may be oligomerized to carboxylic acids or alkyl
esters of a carboxylic acid or triglycerides or other molecules with double bonds.
Double bonds of compounds derived from carboxylic acids are usually located in
the middle of hydrocarbon chain. Smaller molecules are reacted with double
bonds to give linear or ring structures located in the middle of hydrocarbon chain.
Since the cycle length of the catalyst is short in the processes of carboxylic acids,
the feedstock may first be converted into esters or alcohols, which are less
aggressive to the catalyst. Triglycerides may be transesterified with an alcohol to
obtain alkyl esters. Triglycerides decompose to form an ester with the alcohol and
glyceroL Typically methanol is used as the alcohol, but also other C1-C11

alcohols may be used Typical conditions for the transesterification are as follows:
temperature between 60 and 70 °C, pressure between 0.1 and 2 MPa. Excess
amounts of sodium and potassium hydroxides dissolved in methanol are used as
catalysts. Esterification of free carboxylic acids and alcohol requires higher
temperature and pressure (e.g. 240 °C and 9 MPa), or acidic conditions.
Carboxylic acids may also be reduced in known manner to fatty alcohols, either
by direct reduction of the acidic groups to alcohols with lithium aluminium
hydride, thus double bonds remains in alcohols, or by hydrogenation of the alkyl
esters of carboxylic acids to give unsaturated fatty alcohols using a copper-zinc
catalyst at a temperature between 200 and 230 °C, and under a hydrogen pressure
between 20 and 30 MPa. In the hydrogenation reaction, the alcohol used for the
esterification of the carboxylic acid is liberated and may be recycled back to the
esterification, whereas the unsaturated fatty alcohols are passed to the
oligomerization.
In various process steps, hydrocarbons may be used as diluents in the feedstock.
Hydrocarbon can be for instance from biological origin and boiling in diesel fuel
range between 150 and 400 °C, typically between 180 and 360 °C.
The biological starting material yielding the feedstock is preferably pretreated by
known methods for instance to remove impurities. Hydrolysis reaction of
triglycerides may be utilized to produce carboxylic acids to be used as a feed to
oligomerization step. Alternatively, the triglycerides may be hydrolyzed following
oligomerization. In the hydrolysis, glycerol is obtained as the by-product, and thus
no hydrogen is consumed in the HDO step for hydrogenation of glycerol to yield
propane gas. For instance, either the feedstock or the product may be fractioned
by distillation to narrower fractions with respect to hoiling ranges or carbon
numbers, and further, impurities of the feedstock or the final product may be
removed by filtering through suitable filtering aids.

The process
Oligomerization step
According to a preferable embodiment of the process of the invention, feedstock
comprising at least one component with double bonds is selected from the group
of triglycerides, carboxylic acids, acid anhydrides, and/or fatty alcohols and
oligomerized. The feedstock contains at least 50 % by weight of unsaturated
and/or polyunsaturated compounds. One of the components of the feedstock is
preferably selected as the main starting material for the oligomerization step and
the oligomerization conditions are adjusted according to this main starting
material. Other feed materials may be mixed with said main starting materials as
long as they will not interfere with the process, or are advantageous for
processing.
Oligomerization reactions are catalyzed by heat and a suitable catalyst. Suitable
catalysts include cationic clay catalysts, preferably zeolite catalysts, particularly
preferable montmorillonite. Oligomerization reactions of carboxylic acids may be
enhanced by additional reagents such as water. In the oligomerization of
carboxylic acids, up to 10 %, preferably from 0.1 to 4 %, and particularly
preferably from 1 to 2 %, by weight, of water is added to the feedstock. It is not
preferable to use excessive amounts of water, because estolides not dimerized
with carbon-carbon bonds are then produced as by-products.
Suitable oligomerization reactors include fixed bed reactors and mixing tank
reactors. Diluents for adjusting the oligomerization may be used in the reaction.
The diesel fraction or another hydrocarbon obtained from the process is a suitable
diluent that may be recycled. Pressure of the oligomerization step is between 0
and 10 MPa, the temperature being between 100 and 500 °C, preferably from 0 to
5 MPa, and from 200 to 400 °C, respectively. In case the reaction is performed as
a batch reaction, the catalyst amount is from 0.01 to 30 %, by weight of the total
reaction mixture, preferably from 0.5 to 10 % by weight. In case a fixed bed

reactor is used, the amount of the feedstock, expressed as grams per hour per gram
of the catalyst, ranges between 0.1 and 1001/h.
In a mixed tank reactor, the reaction time is less than 16 hours, preferably less
than 8, particularly preferable less than 4 hours. In case short residence time is
used, the lighter non-oligomerized components may be separated from heavier
components already oligomerized for instance by distillation, followed by
recycling the lighter components to oligomerization. During recycling, the
unreactive saturated components may be separated from components having
double bonds for instance by low temperature filtering. Saturated components are
passed to deoxygenation, and optional isomerization for branching the
hydrocarbon chains.
Prehydrogenation step
The activity of hydrogenation catalysts is primarily lost due to coke formed on the
catalyst surface, and thus the product from the oligomerization step may be
optionally subjected to prehydrogenation under mild conditions to hydrogenate
the double bonds, and further, to reduce the formation of coke in the next
deoxygenation step. Prehydrogenation is performed in the presence of
prehydrogenation catalyst, at a temperature between 50 and 400 °C, under a
hydrogen pressure ranging from 0.1 to 20 MPa, the flow rate WHSV being
between 0.1 and 10 1/h, preferably at a temperature between 150 and 250 °C,
under a hydrogen pressure ranging from 1 to 10 MPa, the flow rate being from 1
to 5 Vh. The prehydrogenation catalyst contains metals of the Group VIII and/or
VIA of the periodic table of the elements. The prehydrogenation catalyst is
preferably a supported Pd, Pt, Ni, NiMo or CoMo catalyst, the support being
either alumina and/or silica.
Deoxygenation step
The deoxygenation may alternatively be performed either as hydrodeoxygenation
or decarboxylation/decarbonylation. Deoxygenation preformed as

hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) is suitable for all feedstocks. In the HDO step,
oxygen and oligomerized and optionally prehydrogenated stream is passed to the
HDO catalyst bed comprising one or more catalyst bed(s). In the HDO step, the
pressure is between 0 and 20 MPa, preferably between 1 and 15 MPa, particularly
preferably from 3 to 10 MPa, the temperature being from 100 to 500 °C,
preferably from 200 to 400 °C, particularly preferably from 250 to 350 °C, the
flow rate WHSV is from 1 to 5 1/h, particularly preferably from WHSV from 1 to
3 1/h. In the HDO step, special hydrodeoxygenation catalysts containing a metal of
the Group VIII and/or VIA of the periodic table of the elements, and a support
may be used. The HDO catalyst is preferably a supported Pd, Pt, Ni, NiMo or
CoMo catalyst, the support being either alumina and/or silica.
In case the feedstock contains carboxylic acids and/or carboxylic acid esters, the
deoxygenation may be performed using a decarboxylation/decarbonylation
reaction. In the decarboxylation/decarbonylation reaction, the feedstock and an
optional diluent are introduced to the catalyst bed. The reaction takes place in
liquid phase, and it may be carried out in atmospheric pressure. However, it is
preferable to use vapour pressure according to the reaction temperature of the
reaction mixture. Depending on the feedstock, the pressure in the
decarboxylation/decarbonylation step is between 0 and 20 MPa, preferably
between 0.1 and 20 MPa, the temperature is from 200 to 400 °C, preferably from
250 to 350 °C, and the flow rate WHSV is from 0.1 to 10 1/h, preferably from
WHSV from 1 to 5 1/h. In the decarboxylation/decarbonylation step special
catalysts is used. Catalyst contains a metal of the Group VIII and/or VIA of the
periodic table of the elements, such as a supported Pd, Pt, Ni, NiMo or CoMo
catalyst, the support being either alumina and/or silica and/or activated carbon.
The decarboxylation/decarbonylation catalyst is preferably Pd supported on
carbon in a case of no hydrogen is used in the process, and sulfurized NiMo
supported on alumina in a case of a mixture of hydrogen and an inert gas such as
nitrogen is used in the process. Functional groups no longer exist in the product of
the decarboxylation/decarbonylation step and the products contain only carbon

and hydrogen. The carbon number has been reduced by one carbon per functional
group removed.
In case the deoxygenation is performed as decarboxylation/decarbonylation, the
oligomerization may be carried out prior to deoxygenation, and accordingly, the
feedstock of the oligomerization step contains unsaturated carboxylic acids and/or
esters of carboxylic acids. In case the oligomerization is performed after the
decarboxylation/decarbonylation step, the feed of the oligomerization step
contains unsaturated compounds from decarboxylation/decarbonylation having
the carbon numbers reduced by one carbon per functional group removed,
compared to the feedstock.
In the deoxygenation step, HDO and decarboxylation/decarbonylation reactions
described above may be performed simultaneously to yield carbon dioxide or
carbon monoxide from part of the functional groups and part of the functional
groups are hydrodeoxygenated.
Following the deoxygenation step, light fractions may be passed with hydrogen to
a separate isomerization step. The pressure of the isomerization step is from 0.1 to
20 MPa, preferably from 5 to 10 MPa. The temperature is between 100 and 500
°C, preferably from 200 to 400 °C. In the isomerization step, special isomerization
catalysts containing a molecular sieve and a metal of the Group VTH of the
periodic table of the elements, such as Pd, and Pt may be used. Alumina and/or
silica may be used as the support.
Following oligomerization and deoxygenation steps, the product stream may
optionally be finished to remove double bonds and aromatics. In case the finishing
step is carried out using hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst, the step is called
hydrofinishing. In the hydrofinishing step, the pressure is from 1 to 20 MPa,
preferably from 5 to 15 MPa. The temperature is between 50 and 500 °C,
preferably from 100 to 400 °C. In the hydrofinishing step, special catalysts

containing a metal of the Group VET as well as alumina and/or silica may be used.
The hydrofinishing catalyst is preferably a supported Pd, Pt, or Ni catalyst, the
support being either alumina and/or silica. The finishing may also be carried out
without hydrogen by removing polar components using adsorption materials, for
instance clay or molecular sieve.
Following oligomerization, deoxygenation and optional isomerization and
finishing steps, the product is fractionated, for instance by distillation. Typical
carbon number ranges of the product components are as follows: gas C1-C4,
gasoline C5-C10, diesel C11-C26, base oil C18-C76.
If desired, the hydrocarbon component obtained as the product or another suitable
hydrocarbon stream may be recycled to various process steps such as to
oligomerization and deoxygenation steps for improving the conversion and/or
selectivity, or to control the exothermal nature of the reactions.
In an embodiment of the invention, the product already oligomerized may be
oligomerized further by introducing additional monomer (mixing tank reactor)
into the process, or by repeated recycling of the product already oligomerized
while adding the monomer (continuous reactor). In this way, especially thick base
oils having carbon numbers as high as C150-C550 may be provided, said thick
base oils being useful in the production of thick lubricants and as improvers of the
viscosity index.
Product
It was surprisingly found that high-quality saturated non-polar hydrocarbon
component preferably of biological origin, having excellent viscosity and low
temperature properties, especially suitable as base oils was obtained with the
process of the invention. The product is branched by carbon-carbon bonds.

A hydrocarbon component preferably of biological origin, suitable as solvent,
gasoline or diesel fuel or diesel fuel component is also obtained. The diesel
component or C18-C24 base oil component may be isomerized to improve the
low temperature properties. The gasoline component may be isomerized to
increase the octane number. There is no need for isomerization in case olefins
with short chains or unsaturated carboxylic acids with short chains are used in
post-oligomerization of the process for branching the remaining double bonds.
The carbon number and the carbon number range of the base oil depend both on
the biological starting material of the feedstock and the production process.
Conventional carbon number range of the base oil applications of the prior art is
from C18 to C76, whereas the carbon number range of particularly thick base oils
may be as high as from C150 to C550. In case the kinematic viscosity range
KV100 between 4 and 7 mm2/s is desired, branched and/or cyclic paraffins with a
single carbon number are typically obtained from feedstocks containing
carboxylic acids with identical chain lengths using the process of the invention,
following oligomerization and HDO steps.
The carbon number range of the base oil or base oil component produced by the
oligomerization and combined HDO-decarboxylation/decarbonylation process of
the invention is extremely narrow, the carbon number range of the product being
from C30 to C32 for feedstocks containing typically C16 components, and from
C34 to C36 for feedstocks containing C18 components, in case the viscosity range
KV100 between 4 and 7 mm2/s is desired. In case the feedstock is a mixture of
C16 and C18 components, the width of the carbon number range of the product is
typically seven carbons. Carbon number range of the base oil of the invention may
also be at very high level, even as high as from C150 to C550 in case particularly
heavy base oils suitable as viscosity increasers and viscosity index improvers are
desired.

In Table 2 below, carbon numbers and typical structures of base oils of biological
origin according to the invention (1 and 2), and synthetic base oils of the prior art
having a KV100 from 4 to 6 mm2/s (3-5) are presented. Most typical carbon
numbers are bold-faced. With-respect to the molecular structures, the base oil or
base oil component of the invention differs from the products of the prior art, as
shown by the table.
In Table 2, structures of naphthenes are typical examples of a compound group. In
structural examples, the carbon number ranges of the oligomeric dimers no. 1 and
2 produced from C18 are between C34 and C36, and between C51 and C54,
respectively, whereas the carbon number ranges of known synthetic hydrocarbon
base oils of the same viscosity class, such as PAO, is between C32 and C48, and
C30 and C48 for PIO.



SaturatedTiydrocarbons are classified according to the carbon and hydrogen atoms
by field ionization mass spectrometry (using fee FIMS )
1 C(n).H(2n+2) paraffins
2 C(n).H(2n) mononaphthenes
3 C(n).H(2n-2) dinaphthenes

4 C(n).H(2n-4) trinaphthenes
5 C(n).H(2n-6) tetranaphthenes
6 C(n).H(2n-8) pentanaphthenes
In Table 2, the percentages (%, by FIMS) refer to the groups of compounds
determined according to said method.
Base oil components of Table 2 are produced as follows:
1. Oligomerized and hydrogenated C18 fatty acid dimer according to the
invention, produced from tall oil

2. Oligomerized and hydrogenated C18 fatty acid trimer according to the
invention, produced from tall oil
3. PAO C16 produced by oligomerization from 1-hexadecene using a
heterogeneous catalyst
4. PAO CIO produced by oligomerization from 1-decene using a homogeneous
catalyst
5. PIO produced by dimerization of internal C15-C16 olefin.
Oligomerized dimers and trimers of the invention (structures 1 and 2 of Table 2)
are branched at double bonds within C18 hydrocarbon chain, thus having pairs of
tertiary carbons on adjacent carbon atoms in the molecular structure. PIO is
typically a dimer produced from shorter C15-C16 hydrocarbons, whereas the
product of the invention is a C16 and/or C18 dimer. In addition, significant
amount, even-more than 50 %, by FIMS, of mononaphthenes is present in the
product of the invention.
In the production method of polyalpha olefins of the prior art, the reaction
typically takes place with boron trifluoride catalysts at double bonds at the end of
the C10 chain, thus leaving one methylene group (-CH2-) between tertiary carbons
(structure 4 in Table 2). In case the oligomerization is performed using a
heterogeneous catalyst, the double bonds are shifted from the alpha position,
while simultaneously, skeletal isomerization occurs, thus leaving from 1 to 10
methylene groups between tertiary carbons in the typical structure of the base oil
obtained (structure 3 in Table 2, e.g. 4 methylene groups). In case oligomerization
is carried out using a homogeneous catalyst, skeletal isomerization takes
respectively place in the hydrogenation step following oligomerization, and thus
C1-C3 side branches are formed next to double bonds in the molecules of
structure 4 shown in Table 2. There are mainly alkyl branches in PAO and PIO
base oils of the prior art, whereas naphthenic components branched by ring
structures are present in the product of the invention, in addition to alkyl branches.

Pour point of the high quality base oil obtained with the process of the invention
is at best less than -40 °C, and accordingly, the base oil is very suitable for
demanding low temperature conditions. The viscosity index of the product may be
as high as 125, the product thus being suitable in base oil applications of Group
III.
The molecular mass of the product may be adjusted according to carbon number
ranges necessary for different applications by adding suitable unsaturated
carboxylic acids or olefins to the feedstock. Carboxylic acids having small
molecules, or olefins cross-linking or oligomerizing with the fatty acids of
triglycerides form short branches on the main hydrocarbon chain of the fatty acid.
In case other natural cyclic compounds such as alpha pinene are used as additional
components of the feedstock, molecules having ring structures in the side chain
within the molecular chain are obtained. One or two additional components are
preferably oligomerized in the product. According to the invention, corresponding
products taylored with respect to hydrocarbon chain lengths may also be produced
from other carboxylic acids and from other bio components with short chains.
Lighter branched components from HDO treatment are very suitable as bio diesel
components.
The base oil of biological origin according to the invention comprises a branched
saturated hydrocarbon product. Said product is produced from biological starting
material, said product containing at least 90 %, preferably at least 95 %,
particularly preferably at least 97 %, and at best 99 % by weight, of saturated
hydrocarbons. Moreover, the product of the invention contains more than 20 %,
but not more than 90 %; preferably more than 20 %, but not more than 80 %; and
particularly preferably more than 20 %, but not more than 60 % of
mononaphthenes, based on the FIMS method, and less than 3.0 %, preferably less
than 1.0 %, and particularly preferably less than 0.1 % of polycyclic naphthenes
by FIMS. In addition, the product of the invention contains up to 20 %, preferably

up to 10 %, and particularly preferably up to 5 %, and at best up to 1 % by weight
of linear paraffins (GC).
For base oils of the invention, the viscosity index is at least 100 and preferably at
least 110, and particularly preferably at least 128, as determined by the method of
ASTMD2270.
The product of the invention is branched with carbon-carbon bonds, this structure
endowing the product with a very low pour point not more than 0 °C, preferably
not more than -10 °C, and particularly preferably not more than -35 °C (ASTM D
5950).
For base oils or of the invention, having a viscosity KV100 of 4-7 mm2/s, the
width of the carbon number range is no more than 9 carbons, preferably no more
than 7 carbons, and particularly preferably no more than 3 carbons (determined by
field ionization mass spectrometry, FIMS). More than about 50 %, preferably
more than 75 % and particularly preferably more than 90 % by weight of the base
oil contains hydrocarbons belonging to this narrow carbon number distribution.
Sulfur content of said base oil of the invention is less than 300 ppm, preferably
less than 50 ppm, and particularly preferably less than 1 ppm, (ASTM D 3120).
Nitrogen content of said base oil of the invention is less than 100 ppm, preferably
less than 10 ppm, and particularly preferably less than 1 ppm, (ASTM D 4629).
Base oils of the invention contains carbon 14C isotope, which may be considered
as an indication of the use of renewable raw materials. Typical 14C isotope content
of the product completely of biological origin is at least 100 %, determined as the
content of radioactive carbon on the basis of radioactive carbon content in the
atmosphere in 1950 for a product completely based on biological materials
(ASTM D 6866). 14C isotope content of the base oil is lower in case other than

biological components are used in the processing of the product, said content
being, however, more than 50 %, preferably more than 90 %, particularly
preferably more than 99 %. In this way, even low amounts of base oil of
biological origin may be detected in other types of hydrocarbon base oils.
Volatility of the base oil component with a narrow boiling range, obtained
according to the invention, is extremely low compared to similar products of the
prior art. For base oil of the invention the volatility of product, having KV100
from 3 cSt to 8 cSt, is no more than 2271.2*(KV100)-3.5373 % by weight as
determined by the method of DIN 51581-2 (Mathematical Noack method based
on ASTM D 2887 GC distillation).
The cetane number of the product obtained with the process of the invention,
suitable as a diesel component, is more than 40, preferably more than 55, and
particularly preferably more than 70. It contains more than 60 %, preferably more
than 99 % by volume, of paraffins, and less than 30 %, preferably less than 1 %
by volume, of aromatics, based on the IP-391 method. The diesel product
comprises less than 40 %, preferably less than 10 %, by weight, of linear n-
paraffins. The cloud point of the diesel component is less than 0 °C, preferably
less than -15 °C, and particularly less than -30 °C. Typically, the diesel product
obtained is totally of biological origin. In the product of the invention, there are
branches formed by carbon-carbon bonds, this structure resulting in a very low
cloud point. Due to the biological origin, said products of biological origin also
contain carbon 14C isotope indicating that renewable raw materials are used. 14C
content of a product of totally biological origin is at least 100 %.
Selection of the biological feedstock has a strong influence on the composition
and boiling range of the product. Moreover, the feed may be fractioned by
distillation to fractions having narrow carbon numbers that may be tailored for
different applications. For feedstocks having hydrocarbon chain lengths of C16,
C18, C20, and C22, typical carbon numbers of the dimer products are respectively

C32, C36, C40, and C44 following hydrodeoxygenation, said carbon numbers
being reduced by two to C30, C34, C38, and C42 following
decarboxylation/decarbonylation. Since the distillation range of the product
mainly depends on the hydrocarbon chain length, narrow product fractions are
obtained.
Advantages of the invention
The process of the invention, and the obtained product have several advantages,
including for instance the use of renewable raw materials instead of non-
renewable feedstocks for lowering carbon dioxide emissions contributing to the
greenhouse effect. A biological starting material containing heteroatoms serves
according to the invention as a fully new raw material source for high-quality
saturated base oils.
Starting materials of the process of the invention are available all over the world,
and moreover, the utilization of the process is not limited by significant initial
investments, in contrast for instance to the GTL technology.
The products of the inventive process are carbon dioxide neutral with respect to
the use and disposal thereof, that is, they will not increase the carbon dioxide load
of the atmosphere, in contrast to products derived from fossil starting materials.
The base oil prepared according to the present invention is hydrolytically more
stabile and it has a structure not decomposing under humid conditions, unlike the
esters and other base oils containing heteroatoms, such as fatty alcohol dimers. In
addition, the oxidation resistance of saturated hydrocarbons is better than that of
corresponding base oils containing unsaturated groups on the basis of fatty acid or
fatty alcohol dimers, or ester base oils. A saturated hydrocarbon component is not
decomposed as easily as esters that form corrosive acids. A nonpolar and
saturated hydrocarbon component is obtained using the process of the invention

by removing the oxygen of alcohols, esters, or carboxylic acids in the
deoxygenation step as well as the heteroatoms of any impurities of the feedstock.
Oligomerizing carboxylic acid derivatives yield a structure having branches
formed by carbon-carbon bonds following deoxygenation. In C12:1 - C20:l
oligomerization, lengths of the obtained branches are typically from C3 to C11.
Such hydrocarbons have very low pour points favourable for base oil applications,
and thus the product is liquid at very low temperatures, and further, it has a
superior viscosity index. The produced saturated hydrocarbon product is a suitable
component of base oils without any mixing limitations, and further, it is
compatible with lubricant additives.
The base oil of the invention is endowed with superior technical properties
compared to conventional hydrocarbon oils of the corresponding viscosity class,
particularly in cases where KV100 is from 4 to 7 mm2/s. Narrow boiling range
indicates that the product does not contain any initial light fraction, meaning
molecules considerably lighter than the average shown as decreased volatility of
the product and resulting in reduced emissions in practical applications. The base
oil product does not contain heavy distillation "tail" meaning t the molecules
considerably heavier than the average, resulting in excellent low temperature
properties of the product.
For the base oil of the invention, the carbon number and boiling ranges are
governed by the feedstock composition. For base oils of the prior art, the boiling
range is adjusted by distilling the product to obtain a fraction having the desired
kinematic viscosity. It is preferable for the lubricants to have base oils with
narrow carbon numbers and thus narrow boiling ranges, and accordingly, the
compositions contain molecules of similar sizes behaving under different
conditions in a similar way.
For the base oil or base oil component, high viscosity index of the product
indicates that the amount of the viscosity index improver typically used in

lubricating compositions may be reduced. It is generally known that for instance
in engine oils, the VII component is the main cause for fouling of the engine. In
addition, reduction of the amounts of VII results in significant savings in costs.
Compared to conventional base oils derived from crude oil, no sulfur or nitrogen
are present in said products. The process based on purified starting materials
derived from natural fatty acids allows the safe use of products in such
applications where the users are exposed to said oil or vapour of oil. Moreover,
response of the product of the invention to antioxidant agents and agents lowering
pour point is excellent, thus allowing for the longer use of the lubricants prepared
-from said base oil, as well as the use thereof under cold weather conditions.
Compared to esters, the base oil of the invention is more compatible with
conventional base oil components derived from crude oil and with other
hydrocarbon base oils, as well with lubricant additives. Moreover, there are no
such problems with elastomers such as sealing materials as encountered for esters.
Advantages of the base oil of the invention include the fact that it complies with
the requirements for base oils according to API Group n, preferably Group III,
and may be used in compositions of engine oils like other base oils of API Group
II or HI classification, according to same oil change rules.
The base oil of the invention is derived from renewable natural resources as
clearly seen from the l4C isotope content of the product. I4C isotope content of the
product is at least 100 % for products of biological origin, and 0 % for products
derived from crude oil. Proportion of the base oil component of biological origin
may also be determined on the basis of the 14C isotope content of the base oil with
an accuracy of at least 1 %.
Low temperature properties and the cetane number of the middle distillate
produced by the process of the invention, suitable as a diesel fuel, are also

excellent, the middle distillate thus being suitable in demanding low temperature
applications.
With the optional prehydrogenation step, side reactions of double bonds such as
polymerization, ring formation, and aromatization may be decreased, said side
reactions being detrimental to the viscosity properties of the products and causing
coke formation on the HDO catalyst.
By means of an optional recycling of the unreacted feedstock components, more
reactions of the double bonds may be achieved to improve the product yield.
Instead of or in addition to biological starting materials, synthetic compounds
having a corresponding chemical structure may also be used in the invention as
the feed.
The properties of the hydrocarbon components produced according to the
invention, and described in the following examples are excellent, and moreover,
carbon number ranges and distillation ranges are very narrow. The process of the
invention provides a molecular structure having superior viscosity properties and
excellent low temperature properties. The products are well suited as base oils
without blending limitations, and further, the products are also compatible with
lubricant additives.
The invention is now illustrated by means of the following examples. The purpose
is, however, not to limit the scope thereof to the embodiments described or
combinations thereof. The invention may also be carried out otherwise than in the
way specifically described without departing from the appended claims.
Examples

Example 1
Preparation of a hydrocarbon component from plant oil
Feedstock containing 200 ml of soybean oil, 6 g of montmorillonite catalyst, and
5 ml of distilled water, was loaded in high pressure Parr reactor. The temperature
was increased to 270 °C and the oil was allowed to oligomerize while slowly
mixing for 7 hours.
Thereafter, in the HDO step, the mixture oligomerized above was hydrogenated in
the high pressure Parr reactor using dried and activated NiMo/Al2O3 catalyst to
yield i-paraffin. 200 ml of oligomerized soy oil mixture was hydrogenated at 325
°C, under a hydrogen pressure of 5 MPa, until no acid groups were detected in the
FTIR spectrum of the sample. The reaction mixture was mixed at 300 rpm. The
final product was distilled, and mainly branched and cyclic C36 paraffin was
obtained as the product.
The properties of the hydrocarbon component obtained are shown in Table 3.
Hydrocarbon components may also be produced in a similar manner from other
plant and fish oils and animal fats comprising double bonds.
Example 2
Preparation of a hydrocarbon component from methyl esters of carboxylic
acids derived from soybean oil
Soybean oil was pretreated by transesterification with methanol under basic
conditions, at temperature of 70 °C under a pressure of 0.1 MPa in the presence of
a sodium methoxide catalyst in two steps. Methyl esters of carboxylic acids were
purified by washing with an acid and water, and then they were dried. The
carboxylic acid composition of the methyl ester derived from soybean oil was as
follows: C16:0,11%; C18:2, 20 %; C18:l, 8 %; C18:2, 54 %; and C18:3, 6 %.

The carboxylic acid methyl ester mixture obtained above was oligomerized in a
high pressure Parr reactor. 200 ml of the feedstock and 6 g of bentonite catalyst
were introduced into the reactor, the reactor was pressurized with nitrogen twice
to displace oxygen, then the temperature was increased to 350 °C, and the
carboxylic acid methyl ester mixture was allowed to oligomerize while slowly
mixing for 7.2 hours. Monomeric, dimeric, and trimeric methyl esters were
separated from the reaction mixture using a silica column.
Then, the dimeric and the trimeric methyl esters obtained above were respectively
hydrogenated as described in example 1, and the final product was distilled, thus
yielding 26 %, by weight, of branched and cyclic C36 paraffin, and 15 %, by
weight, of branched and cyclic C54 paraffin.
The properties of the hydrocarbon component obtained are presented in Table 3.
The properties of the product are excellent, the molecular distribution being very
narrow. Hydrocarbon components may also be produced in a similar manner from
other methyl esters of carboxylic acids of plant, fish or animal origin comprising
several double bonds. The yield of the process may be improved by recycling the
unreacted monomers.
Example 3
Preparation of a hydrocarbon component from carboxylic acids derived
from tall oil
In the pretreatment step, free carboxylic acids of tall oil were distilled. Thereafter,
the carboxylic acids were oligomerized in a high pressure Parr reactor. 200 g of
the feedstock (carboxylic acids), 16 g of montmorillonite catalyst, and 10 g of
water were introduced into the reactor. The temperature was increased to 255 °C,
and the carboxylic acids were allowed to oligomerize while slowly mixing for 3
hours. The mixture was cooled, and the catalyst was filtered off. Monomers were

separated from the dimers and trimers (acids) of the reaction mixture using a silica
column. The yield of the carboxylic acid dimer was 45 %, by weight.
In the HDO step, the fraction containing dimers was hydrogenated as in Example
1 until no carboxylic acid peak was present in the FTIR spectrum. Both branched
and cyclic paraffins were obtained as the product.
The properties of the hydrocarbon component obtained are presented in Table 3.
Hydrocarbon components may also be produced in a similar manner from free
carboxylic acids derived from other oils than from tall oil, or from hydrolysed
carboxylic acids of plant or fish oil, or animal fats, said acids comprising double
bonds.
Example 4
Preparation of a hydrocarbon component from carboxylic acids derived
from tall oil, utilizing prehydrogenation
In the pretreatment step, free carboxylic acids of tall oil were distilled. Then, the
feedstock comprised 30 % of C18:l, 42 % of C18:2, and 9 % of C18:3 carboxylic
acids, by weight. In addition, the feedstock contained 2 % of resin acids. The
carboxylic acids of tall oil were oligomerized in a high pressure Parr reactor. 200
g of the feed mixture, 16 g of a montmorillonite catalyst, and 10 g of water were
loaded into a reactor. For the displacement of oxygen, the nitrogen pressure was
increased to 0.5 MPa, and the mixture was stirred at 600 rmp for a moment.
Pressure was released, and the pressurization with nitrogen was repeated. Then
the temperature was increased to 225 oC, and the carboxylic acids were allowed to
oligomerize while slowly mixing for 2 hours. The product was cooled, and the
catalyst was filtered off. Monomers, dimers, and trimers (acids) were separated
from the reaction mixture using a silica column. The yield of the carboxylic acid
dimer was 45 %, by weight.

Prior to HDO step, the double bonds of the dimers obtained above were
hydrogenated using a presulfurized NiMo/Al2O3 catalyst in a high pressure Parr
reactor of 450 ml. Prehydrogenation was performed using a dried and activated
catalyst at 230 °C, under a hydrogen pressure of 5 MPa while mixing at 300 rpm.
Hydrogenation of the dimers was continued until no double bonds were seen in
the FTIR spectrum.
The dimers was hydrogenated in the HDO step as in Example I, until the
carboxylic acid peak was disappeared from the FTIR spectrum, followed by
filtering of the paraffinic product kieselguhr. Both branched and cyclic C34, C35,
C36 paraffins were obtained as the final products.
The properties of the hydrocarbon component obtained are presented in Table 3.
The properties of the hydrocarbon component are excellent, the molecular
distribution being very narrow. Hydrocarbon components may also be produced
in a similar manner from free carboxylic acids derived from other oils than from
tall oil, or from hydrolysed carboxylic acids of plant or fish oil, or animal tats,
said acids comprising double bonds.
Example 5
Preparation of a hydrocarbon component from methyl esters of carboxylic
acids derived from soybean oil, and alpha pincne
Soybean oil was transesterified with methanol as in Example 2, thus yielding
methyl esters of carboxylic acids. The reaction mixture was purified by washing
with an acid and water. Finally, the carboxylic acid methyl ester was dried. The
carboxylic acid composition of the methyl ester was as follows: 016:0, 11%;
C18:0, 20 %; C18:l, 8 %; C18:2, 54 %; and C18:3, 6 %.
The soybean oil methyl ester obtained above was oligomerized with alpha pinene,
the molecular ration being 2:1 respectively, in a high-pressure Parr reactor using 8

% of a bentonite catalyst, and 4 % of water. 200 ml of the feedstock mixture was
loaded into the reactor. The displacement of Oxygen was done as in example 4. *
The temperature and the pressure were respectively increased to 310 °C, and
2MPa, and the soybean oil methyl ester was allowed to oligomerize with alpha
pinene while slowly mixing for 6 hours.
The oligomerized product was subjected to hydrodeoxygenation as described in
Example 1. Monomers were separated from the final product by distillation, thus
giving "pinene branched" C28 isoparaffin, and a mixture of paraffinic dimers and
trimers from carboxylic acid methyl ester. The properties of the hydrocarbon
component obtained as the product are presented in Table 3. Branched
hydrocarbon components may also be produced in a similar manner from other
carboxylic acids of plant, animal or fish origin, or fats, said acids comprising
several double bonds, or methyl esters of carboxylic acids and suitable
compounds with small molecular sizes, preferably of biological origin.
Example 6
Preparation of a heavy hydrocarbon component from carboxylic acids of tall
oil
Tall oil was oligomerized as in Example 3, with the exception that the reaction
was carried out while slowly mixing for 7 hours. The trimers were separated from
the dimers and monomers of the reaction mixture using a silica column.
The trimers obtained above were hydrogenated in a HDO step as in Example 1
until no carboxylic acid peak was present in the FTTR spectrum. Both branched
and cyclic paraffin was obtained as the product. The properties of the product are
shown in Table 3. Hydrocarbon components may also be produced in a similar
manner from free carboxylic acids derived from other oils than from tall oil, or
from hydrolysed carboxylic acids of plant or fish oil, or animal fats, said acids
comprising double bonds.





Example 7
Demonstration ofthe biological origin ofthe hydrocarbon component
Hydrocarbon component of biological origin from example 6 was weighed into a
base oil derived from mineral oil of the Group HI, and mixed thoroughly. For the
first sample, 0.5014 g of the hydrocarbon component of biological origin was
weighed, and base oil component of the Group II was added in an amount to
obtain a total weight of 10.0 g; for the second sample, 1.0137 g of the
hydrocarbon component of biological origin was weighed, and base oil
component of lie Group II was added in an amount to obtain a total weight of
10.0232 g. The measured results are in Table 5, below. The results are expressed
as "percent modern carbon", based on the content of radioactive carbon of the
atmosphere in 1950. At present, percentage of modern carbon in the atmosphere is
about 107 %. δ13 C value shows the ratio of stable carbon isotopes 13C/I2C. By
means of this value, the isotope fractionation taking place in the sample treatment
process may be corrected. Actual results are presented in the last column. Method
is ASTM D6866.


Example 8
Carbon number distribution
The carbon number distribution of the base oils according to invention is
described narrower than that of conventional base oils. The baseoils of the
invention contain higher amount of higher boiling C34 - C36 fractions compared
to the conventional products of same viscosity range (KV100 about 4 cSt), as
shown in Figure 2. The carbon number distribution is determined by FIMS. The
sample of FIMS analysis is that of example 4 with C18 tall oil fatty acid feed. In
addition to hydrodeoxygenation to produce C36 compounds, also
decarboxylation/decarbonylation lead to parafflnic C35/C34 compounds
(combined HDO-decarboxylation/decarbonylation).

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS
1. A process for producing a saturated hydrocarbon component, characterized in
that feedstock comprising one or more component(s) selected from the group
consisting of carboxylic acids having carbon numbers from C4 to C38, esters of
C4 to C38 carboxylic acids and C1-C11 alcohols, C4-C38 carboxylic acid
anhydrides, and C4-C38 alcohols is oligomerized in the presence of a cationic
clay catalyst and deoxygenized, said feedstock containing at least 50 % by weight
of unsaturated and/or polyunsaturated compounds.
2. The process according to claim 1, characterized in that the feedstock
comprises one or more component(s) selected from the group consisting of
carboxylic acids having carbon numbers from C4 to C24, esters of C12 to C24
carboxylic acids and C1-C3 alcohols, C12-C24 carboxylic acid anhydrides and
C12-C24 alcohols.
3. The process according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the feedstock
comprises at least one starting material of biological origin, selected from the
group consisting of triglycerides, fatty acids, esters of fatty acids and alcohols,
fatty acid anhydrides, and fatty alcohols.
4. The process according to claim 3, characterized in that the starting material is
selected from the group consisting of:
a) plant fats, plant oils, plant waxes; animal fats, animal oils, animal waxes; fish
fats, fish oils, fish waxes, and mixtures thereof, and
b) free fatty acids or fatty acids obtained by hydrolysis, acid transesterification or
pyrolysis reactions from plant fats, plant oils, plant waxes, animal fats, animal
oils, animal waxes, fish fats, fish oils, fish waxes, and mixtures thereof, and

c) esters obtained by transesterification from plant fats, plant oils, plant waxes,
animal fats, animal oils, animal waxes, fish fats, fish oils, fish waxes, and
mixtures thereof, and
d) esters obtained by esterification of free fatty acids of plant, animal and fish
origin with alcohols, and mixtures thereof, and
e) fatty alcohols obtained as reduction products of fatty acids from plant fats,
plant oils, plant waxes, animal fats, animal oils, animal waxes, fish fats, fish
oils, fish waxes, and mixtures thereof, and
f) waste and recycled food grade fats and oils, and fats, oils and waxes obtained
by genetic engineering, and mixtures thereof, and
g) mixtures of said starting materials.

5. The process according to any one of claims 1-4, characterized in that the
feedstock contains at least 80 % by weight of unsaturated and/or polyunsaturated
compounds.
6. The process according to any one of claims 1-5, characterized in that the
oligomerization is carried out under a pressure from 0 to 10 MPa, and at a
temperature from 100 to 500 °C.
7. The process according to any one of claims 1-6, characterized in that the
oligomerization is carried out in the presence of a zeolite catalyst.
8. The process according to any one of claims 1-7, characterized in that up to 10
%, preferably from 0.1 to 4 % by weight of water is added to the feedstock
containing carboxylic acids in the oligomerization step.
9. The process according to any one of claims 1-8, characterized in that the
deoxygenation is carried out as hydrodeoxygenation or as decarbonylation/
decarboxylation, the deoxygenation being carried out prior to, or following the
oligomerization.

10. The process accordjag to claim 9, characterized in that the
hydrodeoxygenation is carried out in the presence of hydrogen, at a temperature
between 100 and 500 °C, under a pressure between 0 and 20 MPa, the flow rate
WHSV being between 0.1 and 10 1/h, in the presence of a hydrodeoxygenation
catalyst.
11. The process according to claim 9 or 10, characterized in that the
hydrodeoxygenation catalyst is a Pd, Pt, Ni, NiMo or CoMo catalyst having an
alumina and/or silica support.
12. The process according to any one of claims 9-11, characterized in that prior
to the hydrodeoxygenation, the product from the oligomerization step is subjected
to prehydrogenation in the presence of a catalyst, at a temperature between 50 and
400 °C, under a hydrogen pressure between 0.1 and 20 MPa, the flow rate WHSV
being between 0.1 and 101/h.
13. The process according to claim 12, characterized in that the catalyst is a Pd,
Pt, Ni, NiMo or CoMo catalyst having an alumina and/or silica support.
14. The process according to claim 9, characterized in that the feedstock of the
processor the product of the oligomerization step is subjected to decarboxylation/
decarbonylation in the presence of a decarboxylation/decarbonylation catalyst, at
a temperature between 200 and 400 °C, pressure between 0 and 20 MPa, the flow
rate WHSH being between 0.1 and 101/h.
15. The process according to claim 14, characterized in that the
decarboxylation/decarbonylation catalyst is a Pd, Pt, Ni, NiMo or CoMo catalyst
having an alumina and/or silica support or an activated carbon support.

16. The process according to any one of claims 1-15, characterized in that
following the oligomerization and the deoxygenation steps, the product is
subjected to isomerization in the presence of hydrogen gas under a pressure
between 0.1 and 20 MPa, at a temperature between 100 and 500 °C, in the
presence of a isomerization catalyst.
17. The process according to claim 16, characterized in that the isomerization
catalyst is a supported catalyst containing a molecular sieve and a metal of the
Group VIII of the periodic table of the elements.
18. Use of the process according to any one of claims 1-17 for producing gasoline,
solvent, and/or diesel fractions.
19. Base oil, characterized in that the base oil contains at least 90 % by weight of
saturated hydrocarbons, 20-90 % of mononaphthenes, less than 3.0 % of
polycyclic naphthenes, no more than 20 % by weight of linear paraffins, and at
least 50 _% by weight of the saturated hydrocarbons have width of the carbon
number range of no more than 9 carbons, the base oilbeing of biological origin
and having kinematic viscosity at 100 °C from 3cSt to 8 cSt.

20. The base oil according to claim 19, characterized in that the base oil contains
at least 95 % by weight of saturated hydrocarbons, 20 - 80 % of mononaphthenes,
no more than 10 % by weight of linear paraffins, and at least 75 % by weight of
the saturated hydrocarbons have width of the carbon number range of no more
than 9 carbons.
21. The base oil according to claim 19 or 20, characterized in that the base oil
contains at least 97 % by weight of saturated hydrocarbons, 20-60 % of
mononaphthenes, no more than 5 % by weight of linear paraffins, and at least 90
% by weight of the saturated hydrocarbons have width of the carbon number
range of no more than 9 carbons.

22. The base oil according to any one of claims 19-21, characterized in that the
volatility of the base oil is no more than 2271.2*(KV100)-3.5373 %.
23. The base oil according to any one of claims 19-22, characterized in that the
width of the carbon number range is up to 7 carbons, preferably up to 3 carbons.
24. The base oil according to any one of claims 19-23, characterized in that the
14C isotope content of the base oil is at least 100 %.

The invention relates to a process for producing high-quality saturated
base oil or a base oil component based on hydrocarbons. The process of the
invention comprises two main steps, the oligomerization and deoxygenation. A
biological starting material containing unsaturated carboxylic acids and/or esters
of carboxylic acids is preferably used as the feedstock.

Documents:


Patent Number 259502
Indian Patent Application Number 2259/KOLNP/2008
PG Journal Number 12/2014
Publication Date 21-Mar-2014
Grant Date 14-Mar-2014
Date of Filing 04-Jun-2008
Name of Patentee NESTE OIL OYJ
Applicant Address KEILARANTA 21, FI-02150 ESPOO
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 KOIVUSALMI EIJA TARAMÄENTIE 31, FI-06830 KULLOONKYLÄ
2 MATIKAINEN JORMA KAARELANTIE 19, FI-00430 HELSINKI
3 MYLLYOJA JUKKA LAMMASTIE 14 C 12, FI-01710, VANTAA
PCT International Classification Number C10G 3/00
PCT International Application Number PCT/FI2006/050553
PCT International Filing date 2006-12-12
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 60/749,033 2005-12-12 Finland
2 20055661 2005-12-12 Finland