2016 AIChE Annual Meeting

(675a) Kinetics of Coffee Oil Ethanolysis Catalyzed By an Immobilized Lipase Enzyme to Produce Biodiesel

Authors

Martinez, E. N. - Presenter, Purdue University
As supplies of fossil fuels are depleted, the need for alternative sources of fuel becomes evident. Biodiesel is an attractive alternative to petroleum-based fuel; however, cost of the feedstock, mainly vegetable oils, makes biodiesel a costly product. In the search for alternative feedstocks, spent coffee grounds were revealed to be a largely available and economical source of vegetable oil. To design a process for biodiesel production, a kinetic rate model was necessary. Immobilized lipase was found to be an optimal catalyst for the ethanol transesterification of coffee. Tests were performed in batches, a differential packed bed reactor, and a recycle reactor. Reactor effluents were analyzed by GC-MS. Results indicated significant external mass transfer limitations and stability of the immobilized enzyme catalyst at temperatures less than or equal to 45oC. A modified Michaelis-Menten equation for two substrates provided a good fit for the reaction kinetics in the range of 30o to 45oC.