Cleaner and sustainable synthesis of high‑quality monoglycerides by use of enzyme technologies: techno‑economic and environmental study for monolaurin
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Date
2023-07
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Series Info
Clean Technologies and Environmental Policy;
Scientific Journal Rankings
Abstract
Currently, monoglycerides (MG) are produced using a complicated energy-intensive technology that contributes negatively
toward greenhouse gas mitigation. This work suggests a cleaner and simpler one-step enzymatic production of α-monolaurin
in an inert membrane reactor, where the reaction and enzyme separation are conducted simultaneously in one unit. Can-
dida antarctica lipase (Lipozyme 435) was used to catalyze the esterifcation reaction between lauric acid and glycerin in a
solvent-free system under mild temperatures. Response surface methodology was used to optimize the reaction conditions.
The optimal conditions were a molecular sieve of 14.85% w/w, a temperature of 56.95 °C, an enzyme amount of 5.38% w/w,
and a molar ratio of 4.75% w/w. The gas chromatography (GC) analysis showed that the α-monolaurin percentage was 49.5%
when the enzymatic process (ENZ) was used. The conventional chemical (CHEM) and autocatalytic (AUT) esterifcation
methods were also performed to study their proportional MG yields. The GC results showed the MG percentages of 43.9
and 41.7% for CHEM and AUT, respectively. Economic analysis was also conducted for the suggested enzymatic technique,
and the fndings were compared with those of the CHEM and AUT technologies. Using a plant capacity of 4950 t/year and
11% interest for the proposed ENZ process, the total capital investment of α-monolaurin production was preferably four
times less than that of the CHEM process and three times less than that of the AUT method, presenting investment possibili-
ties. However, the ENZ process showed the least proftability (net proft per day) among the three processes. Nevertheless,
the return on investment and net present value for the ENZ process were preferably higher than those of CHEM and AUT
because of its interestingly lower inside battery limit plant cost and less energy consumption. The AUT/CHEM processes
generated a total carbon dioxide (CO2) exhaust of 678.7 t CO2 eq./year. In contrast, the ENZ process exhausted a total CO2
of only 50 t CO2 eq./year. The present integrated techno-economic and environmental study of α-monolaurin production
emphasizes the green and cost benefts of the proposed ENZ technology.
Description
Keywords
Monolaurin · Sustainable development goals (SDGs) · Climate change · Esterifcation · Lipozyme 435 · Cleaner production · Economic evaluation · Environment · Energy consumption