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Optimization of biological transesterification of waste cooking oil in different solvents using response surface methodology

Bharathiraja Balasubramanian (Department of Chemical Engineering, Vel Tech High Tech Dr.RS Engineering College, Chennai, India)
Praveen Kumar Ramanujam (Department of Biotechnology, Arunai Engineering College, Tiruvannamalai, India)
Ranjith Ravi Kumar (Department of Biotechnology, Vel Tech High Tech Dr.RS Engineering College, Chennai, India)
Chakravarthy Muninathan (Department of Biotechnology, Vel Tech High Tech Dr.RS Engineering College, Chennai, India)
Yogendran Dhinakaran (Department of Biotechnology, Vel Tech High Tech Dr.RS Engineering College, Chennai, India)

Management of Environmental Quality

ISSN: 1477-7835

Article publication date: 8 August 2016

388

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to speak about the production of biodiesel from waste cooking oil which serves as an alternate fuel in the absence of conventional fuels such as diesel and petrol. Though much research work was carried out using non-edible crops such as Jatropha and Pongamia, cooking oil utilized in bulk quantity is discarded as a waste. This is reused again as it contains more of esters that when combined with an alcohol in presence of an enzyme as a catalyst yields triglycerides (biodiesel).

Design/methodology/approach

The lipase producing strain Rhizopus oryzae and pure enzyme lipase is immobilized and treated with waste cooking oil for the production of FAME. Reaction parameters such as temperature, time, oil to acyl acceptor ratio and enzyme concentration were considered for purified lipase and in the case of Rhizopus oryzae, pH, olive oil concentration and rpm were considered for optimization studies. The response generated through each run were evaluated and analyzed through the central composited design of response surface methodology and thus the optimized reaction conditions were determined.

Findings

A high conversion (94.01 percent) was obtained for methanol when compared to methyl acetate (91.11 percent) and ethyl acetate (90.06 percent) through lipase catalyzed reaction at oil to solvent ratio of 1:3, enzyme concentration of 10 percent at 30°C after 24 h. Similarly, for methanol a high conversion (83.76 percent) was obtained at an optimum pH of 5.5, olive oil concentration 25 g/L and 150 rpm using Rhizopus oryzae when compared to methyl acetate (81.09 percent) and ethyl acetate (80.49 percent).

Originality/value

This research work implies that the acyl acceptors methyl acetate and ethyl acetate which are novel solvents for biodiesel production can also be used to obtain high yields as compared with methanol under optimized conditions.

Keywords

Citation

Balasubramanian, B., Ramanujam, P.K., Ravi Kumar, R., Muninathan, C. and Dhinakaran, Y. (2016), "Optimization of biological transesterification of waste cooking oil in different solvents using response surface methodology", Management of Environmental Quality, Vol. 27 No. 5, pp. 537-550. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEQ-06-2015-0118

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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