Enzymatic production of alkyl esters through alcoholysis: A critical evaluation of lipases and alcohols

Li Deng, Xuebing Xu*, Gudmundur G. Haraldsson, Tianwei Tan, Fang Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

79 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper focuses on a detailed evaluation of commercially available immobilized lipases and simple monohydric alcohols for the production of alkyl esters from sunflower oil by enzymatic alcoholysis. Six lipases were tested with seven alcohols, including straight and branched-chain primary and secondary alcohols. The reactions were conducted in a batch stirred reaction vessel using stoichiometric amounts of substrates under solvent-free conditions. Dramatic differences in alcoholysis performance were observed among the different lipases. For most of the alcohols, Novozym 435 produced the highest yield of FA alkyl esters, with yields well over 90% for methanol, absolute ethanol, and 1-propanol. Overall, 96% ethanol was the preferred alcohol for all lipases except Novozym 435, and ethanolysis reactions reached the maximal conversion efficiency. Increasing the water content in the system resulted in an increased degree of conversion for all lipases except Novozym 435. The secondary alcohol 2-propanol significantly reduced the alcoholysis reaction with all lipases; however, the branch-chain isobutanol was more advantageous than linear 1-butanol for Novozym 435, Lipozyme RM IM, and Lipase PS-C. Many commercial immobilized lipases are highly efficient and promising for the production of alkyl esters, offering high reaction yields and a simple operation process.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)341-347
Number of pages7
JournalJAOCS, Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society
Volume82
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2005

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (20176020), the “863” High-Tech Project of China, and the Danish Technological Research Council (STVF) are acknowledged. The EU Major Research Infrastructure (MRI) program via the Center for Advanced Food Studies (LMC) is thanked for support for G.G.H.’s sabbatical at BioCentrum-DTU. Tiankui Yang and Lars Hellgren from BioCentrum-DTU are thanked for their technical help. Bert Nielsen is thanked for his practical assistance.

Other keywords

  • Alcohols
  • Alcoholysis
  • Alkyl esters
  • Batch reaction
  • Biodiesels
  • Lipases

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