Litcius/Paper detail

Bioreactor Rhamnolipid Production Using Palm Oil Agricultural Refinery By-Products

Mohd Nazren Radzuan, James Winterburn, İbrahim M. Banat

2021Processes13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Palm fatty acid distillate (PFAD) and fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) are used by P. aeruginosa PAO1 to produce rhamnolipid biosurfactant. The process of fermentation producing of biosurfactant was structured in a 2 L bioreactor using 2% of PFAD and FAME as carbon sources in minimal medium and with a nitrogen concentration of 1 g L−1. Mass spectrometry results show the crude biosurfactant produced was predominantly monorhamnolipid (Rha-C10-C10) and dirhamnolipid (Rha-Rha-C10-C10) at 503 and 649 m/z value for both substrates. Maximum production of crude rhamnolipid for PFAD was 1.06 g L−1 whereas for FAME it was 2.1 g L−1, with a reduction in surface tension of Tris-HCl pH 8.0 solution to 28 mN m−1 and a critical micelle concentration (CMC) of 26 mg L−1 measured for both products. Furthermore, the 24 h emulsification indexes in kerosene, hexadecane, sunflower oil, and rapeseed oil using 1 g L−1 of crude rhamnolipid were in the range 20–50%. Consequently, PFAD and FAME, by-products from the agricultural refining of palm oil, may result in a product that has a higher added-value, rhamnolipid biosurfactant, in the process of integrated biorefinery.

Topics & Concepts

RhamnolipidChemistryBioreactorCritical micelle concentrationSunflower oilRapeseedChromatographyFood scienceOrganic chemistryMicelleBacteriaPseudomonas aeruginosaBiologyGeneticsAqueous solutionMicrobial bioremediation and biosurfactantsPetroleum Processing and AnalysisMass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications