Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process

Waste clay recovered from palm oil mill effluent (POME) was characterized and used as an enzyme-supporting material for the cassava saccharification process. The clay was treated by the Soxhlet extraction method to remove the residual oil and then characterized using a BET surface area analyser, XRF...

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Published in:BioResources
Main Author: Edama N.A.; Sulaiman A.; Abd-Rahim S.N.; Ku Hamid K.H.; Busu Z.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North Carolina State University 2014
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84911405598&doi=10.15376%2fbiores.9.4.7278-7287&partnerID=40&md5=e838840af1c6f12a07efe24c2ac8c651
id 2-s2.0-84911405598
spelling 2-s2.0-84911405598
Edama N.A.; Sulaiman A.; Abd-Rahim S.N.; Ku Hamid K.H.; Busu Z.
Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
2014
BioResources
9
4
10.15376/biores.9.4.7278-7287
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84911405598&doi=10.15376%2fbiores.9.4.7278-7287&partnerID=40&md5=e838840af1c6f12a07efe24c2ac8c651
Waste clay recovered from palm oil mill effluent (POME) was characterized and used as an enzyme-supporting material for the cassava saccharification process. The clay was treated by the Soxhlet extraction method to remove the residual oil and then characterized using a BET surface area analyser, XRF, XRD, FTIR, TGA, and FESEM. The chemical analysis showed that the sample had a high amount of CaO (93%) with a minor content of SiO2 (1.378%) and Al2O3 (0.707%), with a surface area of 1.15 m2/g. The XRD analysis revealed the major mineral presence to be calcite, as confirmed by FESEM analysis. The FTIR results also attested to the presence of a calcite phase and carbonate groups. To study the performance of the waste clay for enzyme immobilization application, the recovered waste clay was further used as an enzyme supporting material for enzyme immobilization in the cassava saccharification process. Results showed that the enzymes were successfully encapsulated and gave the highest immobilization yield of 70% with 2% clay concentration. In addition, the encapsulated enzymes also enhanced the reusability, where the enzyme retained 32% of its activity after seven cycles of saccharification processing.
North Carolina State University
19302126
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Edama N.A.; Sulaiman A.; Abd-Rahim S.N.; Ku Hamid K.H.; Busu Z.
spellingShingle Edama N.A.; Sulaiman A.; Abd-Rahim S.N.; Ku Hamid K.H.; Busu Z.
Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
author_facet Edama N.A.; Sulaiman A.; Abd-Rahim S.N.; Ku Hamid K.H.; Busu Z.
author_sort Edama N.A.; Sulaiman A.; Abd-Rahim S.N.; Ku Hamid K.H.; Busu Z.
title Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
title_short Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
title_full Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
title_fullStr Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
title_sort Characterization of waste clay from palm oil mill effluent and enzyme immobilization study for cassava saccharification process
publishDate 2014
container_title BioResources
container_volume 9
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.15376/biores.9.4.7278-7287
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84911405598&doi=10.15376%2fbiores.9.4.7278-7287&partnerID=40&md5=e838840af1c6f12a07efe24c2ac8c651
description Waste clay recovered from palm oil mill effluent (POME) was characterized and used as an enzyme-supporting material for the cassava saccharification process. The clay was treated by the Soxhlet extraction method to remove the residual oil and then characterized using a BET surface area analyser, XRF, XRD, FTIR, TGA, and FESEM. The chemical analysis showed that the sample had a high amount of CaO (93%) with a minor content of SiO2 (1.378%) and Al2O3 (0.707%), with a surface area of 1.15 m2/g. The XRD analysis revealed the major mineral presence to be calcite, as confirmed by FESEM analysis. The FTIR results also attested to the presence of a calcite phase and carbonate groups. To study the performance of the waste clay for enzyme immobilization application, the recovered waste clay was further used as an enzyme supporting material for enzyme immobilization in the cassava saccharification process. Results showed that the enzymes were successfully encapsulated and gave the highest immobilization yield of 70% with 2% clay concentration. In addition, the encapsulated enzymes also enhanced the reusability, where the enzyme retained 32% of its activity after seven cycles of saccharification processing.
publisher North Carolina State University
issn 19302126
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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