A few years ago I was conversing with Countrpaul via PM about conversion after glycerol pre-treating. He told me he always achieved a conversion, whereas I never did.
The question was resolved when I realised that my syringe delivered 11 mis of sample into my dropout tube that overestimated the volume, reading a total of 13mls. So an easy fix of pouring the oil in until the level read exactly 10mls resolved the situation, after which I always had a small conversion.
More recently ( especially after reading some of 'Neutrals' old posts on infopop) another anomaly has arisen and I have (hopefully) solved it.
Ok, IMO glycerol pre-treating using the previous batch glycerol and mixing it with the oil lowers titration but doesn't usually achieve any conversion even though a 10/90 test result may show a dropout of < 10mls. How can this be.
When I have 'split' glycerol with sulphuric acid the top FFA layer is usually about 40% of the total volume. I (like many others) always thought that this meant around 40% soap in the glycerol. This is not the case.
According to Neutral for every litre of soap formed during the reaction it takes with it 2 litres of biodiesel into the glycerol. (I recovered a jelly batch for someone 18 months ago and recovered 70 litres of bio from 100 litres of solidish jelly) This means that the top layer in the Sulphuric acid treated glycerol was about 2.7 litres of FFA's (from the soap) and 5,3 litres of biodiesel.
So, when we glycerol pre-treat, the biodiesel (or most of it) that is held by the soap in the glycerol migrates into the oil, leaving most of the soap in the glycerol. This of course explains why the oil has a reduced acid value, but is still acidic, so no conversion has taken place, yet still shows a reduced volume of dropout from the 10/90 test.
Just onto an associated subject, the 10/90 test and temperature. I must say when Jan first came across the test I don't think he realised exactly how it works. Most think that the biodiesel is dissolved into the methanol, leaving the residual oil to drop to the tube bottom. The test doesn't work like that. Lets take a dropout of 2.4mls, that dropout is composed of 1.0 mis of oil and 1.4mls of biodiesel.
It just shows the amount of intermediates (Di's and mono's)left in the bio as adding chemicals for the whole 2.4 mis of dropout doesn't result in any over conversion.
I am absolutely convinced that the 20degsC temperature for the test is too high. A better level is something like 10degs. A sample I recently tested for someone (no dropout at 20degs) had 0.2mls dropout when left in my bio room overnight. That dropout would be composed of about 50/50 oil and bio. The fact that there was any dropout there at all means the presence of mono's meaning a nightmare to water wash. Sure enough the poor guy had washed it 7 times without getting clear wash water.
Had the guy done his dropout at a lower temperature the dropout would have been revealed and given him chance to do another stage.