Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil
Biodiesel is fatty acid methyl ester that commonly derived from vegetable oils and animal fats that can be produced through enzymatic transesterification using lipase. In this study, three different types of lipase were used, which are Lipase Immobilized Pseudomonas cepacia, PcL, Thermomyces lanugin...
Published in: | Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering and Catalysis |
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Diponegoro University
2020
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2-s2.0-85082763786 Gusniah A.; Veny H.; Hamzah F. Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil 2020 Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering and Catalysis 15 1 10.9767/bcrec.15.1.6648.242-252 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85082763786&doi=10.9767%2fbcrec.15.1.6648.242-252&partnerID=40&md5=f398a2905b78f9e45ddadbb424b88354 Biodiesel is fatty acid methyl ester that commonly derived from vegetable oils and animal fats that can be produced through enzymatic transesterification using lipase. In this study, three different types of lipase were used, which are Lipase Immobilized Pseudomonas cepacia, PcL, Thermomyces lanuginosus, TLIM, and Candida Antarctica A (recombinant from Aspergillus oryzae), CALA. These lipases were compared based on their activity at different pH (6-10), temperature (30-50 °C), activation energy, and amount of lipase loading for hydrolysis of p-NPA into n-NP. The result indicates that among the lipase used in the study, CALA is the preferable biocatalyst in the hydrolysis of p-NPA due to the minimum energy required and higher enzymatic activity at 20 mg of enzyme loading. PcL and CALA used in the study gave the optimum activity at pH 9 except for TLIM at pH 8 and the optimum temperature at 40 °C. The kinetic data obtained for CALA in this reaction were Km = 57.412 mM and Vm = 70 μM/min. This finding shows that CALA is beneficial biocatalysts for the transesterification process to obtain a higher product with lower activation energy. Copyright © 2020 BCREC Group. All rights reserved. Diponegoro University 19782993 English Article All Open Access; Gold Open Access |
author |
Gusniah A.; Veny H.; Hamzah F. |
spellingShingle |
Gusniah A.; Veny H.; Hamzah F. Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil |
author_facet |
Gusniah A.; Veny H.; Hamzah F. |
author_sort |
Gusniah A.; Veny H.; Hamzah F. |
title |
Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil |
title_short |
Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil |
title_full |
Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil |
title_fullStr |
Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil |
title_full_unstemmed |
Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil |
title_sort |
Activity and stability of immobilized lipase for utilization in transesterification of waste cooking oil |
publishDate |
2020 |
container_title |
Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering and Catalysis |
container_volume |
15 |
container_issue |
1 |
doi_str_mv |
10.9767/bcrec.15.1.6648.242-252 |
url |
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85082763786&doi=10.9767%2fbcrec.15.1.6648.242-252&partnerID=40&md5=f398a2905b78f9e45ddadbb424b88354 |
description |
Biodiesel is fatty acid methyl ester that commonly derived from vegetable oils and animal fats that can be produced through enzymatic transesterification using lipase. In this study, three different types of lipase were used, which are Lipase Immobilized Pseudomonas cepacia, PcL, Thermomyces lanuginosus, TLIM, and Candida Antarctica A (recombinant from Aspergillus oryzae), CALA. These lipases were compared based on their activity at different pH (6-10), temperature (30-50 °C), activation energy, and amount of lipase loading for hydrolysis of p-NPA into n-NP. The result indicates that among the lipase used in the study, CALA is the preferable biocatalyst in the hydrolysis of p-NPA due to the minimum energy required and higher enzymatic activity at 20 mg of enzyme loading. PcL and CALA used in the study gave the optimum activity at pH 9 except for TLIM at pH 8 and the optimum temperature at 40 °C. The kinetic data obtained for CALA in this reaction were Km = 57.412 mM and Vm = 70 μM/min. This finding shows that CALA is beneficial biocatalysts for the transesterification process to obtain a higher product with lower activation energy. Copyright © 2020 BCREC Group. All rights reserved. |
publisher |
Diponegoro University |
issn |
19782993 |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
accesstype |
All Open Access; Gold Open Access |
record_format |
scopus |
collection |
Scopus |
_version_ |
1825722583554719744 |