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Taguchi orthogonal design assisted immobilization of Candida rugosa lipase onto nanocellulose-silica reinforced polyethersulfone membrane: physicochemical characterization and operational stability

Elias, Nursyafiqah and Abdul Wahab, Roswanira and Lau, Woei Jye and Mahat, Naji Arafat and Chandren, Sheela and Jamalis, Joazaizulfazli (2021) Taguchi orthogonal design assisted immobilization of Candida rugosa lipase onto nanocellulose-silica reinforced polyethersulfone membrane: physicochemical characterization and operational stability. Cellulose, 28 (9). pp. 5669-5691. ISSN 0969-0239

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10570-021-03886-8

Abstract

A greener processing route to replace the current environmentally-unfriendly esterification technique to produce biofuels such as pentyl valerate (PeVa) was explored. This study statistically optimized the covalent immobilization of Candida rugosa lipase (CRL) onto biomass-based nanocellulose-silica (NC-SiO2) reinforced polyethersulfone (PES) membrane to synthesize PeVa. Raman spectroscopy, field emission scanning electron microscopy, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy of NC-SiO2-PES/CRL proved that CRL was successfully conjugated to the membrane. The optimized Taguchi Design-assisted immobilization of CRL onto NC-SiO2-PES membrane (5% glutaraldehyde, 4 h of immobilization, 20 mg/mL CRL concentration, 40 °C and pH 5) gave 90% yield of PeVa in 3 h. The thermal stability of NC-SiO2-PES/CRL was ~ 30% greater over the free CRL, with reusability for up to 14 successive esterification cycles. In a nutshell, the greener NC-SiO2-PES membrane effectively hyperactivated and stabilized the CRL for the esterification production of PeVa. This research provides a promising approach for expanding the use of sustainably sourced NC and SiO2 nanoparticles, as fillers in a PES for improving CRL activity and durability for an extended catalytic process. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:Nanocellulose, Oil palm leaves
Subjects:Q Science > QD Chemistry
Divisions:Science
ID Code:95774
Deposited By: Widya Wahid
Deposited On:31 May 2022 13:19
Last Modified:31 May 2022 13:19

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