Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
71248 | Journal of Molecular Catalysis B: Enzymatic | 2006 | 4 Pages |
Enzymatic methanolysis of vegetable oils for biodiesel production has become a hot point recently, in which study on whole cell as catalyst is an important field. In this paper, whole cell (Rhizopus oryzae IFO 4697) was adopted directly as biocatalyst for biodiesel production. Effects of carbon source on cell growth and whole cell-catalyzed methanolysis of vegetable oils for biodiesel production were studied. The results showed that different oils contained in the cultivation medium had varied effects on the whole cell-catalyzed methanolysis of oils; with some specified oil as the carbon source for cell cultivation, those cells expressed higher catalytic activity in catalyzing the transesterification of the same oil for biodiesel production. The initial reaction rate was increased notably (204%) with oil pretreatment on the cells before catalyzing the reaction, which was possibly due to the improved mass transferring of substrates. Under the optimized conditions, the maximum methyl ester yield could reach 86%.