Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases

Enzymatic transesterification of palm olein in organic solvent was studied. The enzyme was first immobilised to celite, lyophilised for 4 h and then added to a reaction medium composed of water-saturated hexane containing of 10% (w/v) palm olein. The catalytic performance of the enzyme was evalua...

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Main Author: Sidek, Hamidah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 1996
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8367/1/FSMB_1996_3_A.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8367/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.83672012-07-02T02:35:01Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8367/ Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases Sidek, Hamidah Enzymatic transesterification of palm olein in organic solvent was studied. The enzyme was first immobilised to celite, lyophilised for 4 h and then added to a reaction medium composed of water-saturated hexane containing of 10% (w/v) palm olein. The catalytic performance of the enzyme was evaluated by determining changes in the triglycerides (TG) composition and concentration by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and the formation of free fatty acids (FF A) by titration, respectively. For Candida rugosa lipase, the optimal water content was controlled by lyophilisation of the lipase preparation for 4 h. The addition of water to the dried immobilised preparation shifted the reaction equilibrium to favour net hydrolysis. Of the commercially available lipases that were investigated, lipases from Pseudomonas sp. and the lipase from Rhizomucor miehei resulted in the highest extent of transesterification. Besides palm olein, palm kernel olein and coconut oil showed some changes in the triglyceride composition after transesterification process. Changes in the palm olein concentration in the range 5- 1 00% increased the degree of transesterification of the immobilised Pseudomonas sp. and declined with the R. miehei lipase. The maximum enzyme activity was reached at an enzyme loading of 0.40% (w/w). The optimum temperature for trans esterification by immobilised Pseudomonas sp. lipase was 48°C. Hexane, cyclohexane and isooctane were found to be particularly useful organic solvents in the transesterification process. Water-saturated hexane system can be replaced by either dimethysulfoxide- or dimethylformamide-saturated hexane. Methanol was not suitable for the transesterification process. In all cases, the transesterification process resulted in the formation of PPP (tripalmitin), a trisaturated triglyceride initially undetected in the oil, and minor increases in the concentration of 000, OOL, OLL, SOS, where P, 0, L and S are palmitic, oleic, linoleic and stearic acid, respectively thus increasing the slip melting point of the final product. 1996 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8367/1/FSMB_1996_3_A.pdf Sidek, Hamidah (1996) Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases. Masters thesis, Universiti Pertanian Malaysia. English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
description Enzymatic transesterification of palm olein in organic solvent was studied. The enzyme was first immobilised to celite, lyophilised for 4 h and then added to a reaction medium composed of water-saturated hexane containing of 10% (w/v) palm olein. The catalytic performance of the enzyme was evaluated by determining changes in the triglycerides (TG) composition and concentration by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and the formation of free fatty acids (FF A) by titration, respectively. For Candida rugosa lipase, the optimal water content was controlled by lyophilisation of the lipase preparation for 4 h. The addition of water to the dried immobilised preparation shifted the reaction equilibrium to favour net hydrolysis. Of the commercially available lipases that were investigated, lipases from Pseudomonas sp. and the lipase from Rhizomucor miehei resulted in the highest extent of transesterification. Besides palm olein, palm kernel olein and coconut oil showed some changes in the triglyceride composition after transesterification process. Changes in the palm olein concentration in the range 5- 1 00% increased the degree of transesterification of the immobilised Pseudomonas sp. and declined with the R. miehei lipase. The maximum enzyme activity was reached at an enzyme loading of 0.40% (w/w). The optimum temperature for trans esterification by immobilised Pseudomonas sp. lipase was 48°C. Hexane, cyclohexane and isooctane were found to be particularly useful organic solvents in the transesterification process. Water-saturated hexane system can be replaced by either dimethysulfoxide- or dimethylformamide-saturated hexane. Methanol was not suitable for the transesterification process. In all cases, the transesterification process resulted in the formation of PPP (tripalmitin), a trisaturated triglyceride initially undetected in the oil, and minor increases in the concentration of 000, OOL, OLL, SOS, where P, 0, L and S are palmitic, oleic, linoleic and stearic acid, respectively thus increasing the slip melting point of the final product.
format Thesis
author Sidek, Hamidah
spellingShingle Sidek, Hamidah
Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases
author_facet Sidek, Hamidah
author_sort Sidek, Hamidah
title Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases
title_short Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases
title_full Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases
title_fullStr Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases
title_full_unstemmed Transesterification of Palm Olein by Immobilised Microbial Lipases
title_sort transesterification of palm olein by immobilised microbial lipases
publishDate 1996
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8367/1/FSMB_1996_3_A.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8367/
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score 13.18916