Friday, June 25, 2010

vegetable oils into biodiesel

Lipase-mediated conversion of vegetable oils into biodiesel using ethyl acetate as acyl acceptor [An article from: Bioresource Technology]An interesting alternative to diesel from mineral oils is biodiesel from vegetable oil. Biodiesel technology will become interesting once the supply of crude oil become more scarce. Ethyl acetate was explored as an acyl acceptor for immobilized lipase-catalyzed preparation of biodiesel from the crude oils of Jatropha curcas (jatropha), Pongamia pinnata (karanj) and Helianthus annuus (sunflower). The optimum reaction conditions for inter-esterification of the oils with ethyl acetate were 10% of Novozym-435 (immobilized Candida antarctica lipase B) based on oil weight, ethyl acetate to oil molar ratio of 11:1 and the reaction period of 12h at 50^oC. The
maximum yield of ethyl esters was 91.3%, 90% and 92.7% with crude jatropha, karanj and sunflower oils, respectively under the above optimum conditions. Reusability of the lipase over repeated cycles in inter-esterification and ethanolysis was also investigated under standard reaction conditions. The relative activity of lipase could be well maintained over twelve repeated cycles with ethyl acetate while it reached to zero by 6th cycle when ethanol was used as an acyl acceptor.

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