Abstract

Biodiesel (fatty acid methyl esters, FAMEs) was produced from saponifiable lipids (SLs) extracted from wet Nannochloropsis gaditana biomass using methanolysis catalyzed by Rhizopus oryzae intracellular lipase. SLs were firstly extracted with ethanol to obtain 31wt% pure SLs. But this low SL purity also gave a low biodiesel conversion (58%). This conversion increased up to 80% using SLs purified by crystallization in acetone (95wt% purity). Polar lipids play an important role in decreasing the reaction velocity – using SLs extracted with hexane, which have lower polar lipid content (37.4% versus 49.0% using ethanol), we obtained higher reaction velocities and less FAME conversion decrease when the same lipase batch was reused. 83% of SLs were transformed to biodiesel using a 70wt% lipase/SL ratio, 11:1 methanol/SL molar ratio, 10mL t-butanol/g SLs after 72h. The FAME conversion decreased to 71% after catalyzing three reactions with the same lipase batch.

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