Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases

Palm stearin, the cheaper and more solid fraction of palm oil, is a useful hard fat in the manufacture of edible fat such as margarine. However, with slip melting points ranging between 46 to 56°C, only 10% of palm stearin can be added to a standard table margarine. This study was conducted to in...

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Main Author: Lai, Oi Ming
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8518/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8518/1/FSMB_1998_6_A.pdf
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author Lai, Oi Ming
author_facet Lai, Oi Ming
author_sort Lai, Oi Ming
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Palm stearin, the cheaper and more solid fraction of palm oil, is a useful hard fat in the manufacture of edible fat such as margarine. However, with slip melting points ranging between 46 to 56°C, only 10% of palm stearin can be added to a standard table margarine. This study was conducted to investigate the performance of lipase-catalysed transesterified fat blends containing high levels of palm stearin (minimum 40%) when processed into table margarine. In the first part of the work, the effect of several reaction conditions on lipase-aided transesterification of palm stearin was studied. Results on the effect of lyophilisation of enzyme on transesterification indicated increases in % triglyceride (TG) when drying time was increased. The maximum yield was at 4 or 6 hours of drying. Studies on the effect of reaction time indicated that 8h of reaction produced the highest % TG remaining and Rhizomucor miehei and A lcaligenes lipases both showed maximum rates at 6h reaction time. The transesterification process also decreased the slip melting point (SMP) of palm stearin slightly after 24h reaction with R. miehei lipase registering the largest decrease (5.5°C) compared to the initial unreacted mixture. The catalytic stability of R. miehei and Pseudomonas lipases, after being subjected to ten runs of repeated usage indicated that the lipases can be reused to produce fairly constant products on a large scale. The rates of transesterification were found to vary with different lipase sources. Bacterial lipase of Pseudomonas was found to have the fastest rate of reaction (50.0h⁻¹) followed by R. miehei lipase (27.1h⁻¹). Generally, both the above lipases also produced the highest degree of transesterification and % FFA. Pseudomonas lipase-catalysed mixtures caused the biggest drop in SMP and solid fat content (SFC) in all the three mixtures studied.
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language English
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spelling upm-85182012-07-31T03:50:16Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8518/ Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases Lai, Oi Ming Palm stearin, the cheaper and more solid fraction of palm oil, is a useful hard fat in the manufacture of edible fat such as margarine. However, with slip melting points ranging between 46 to 56°C, only 10% of palm stearin can be added to a standard table margarine. This study was conducted to investigate the performance of lipase-catalysed transesterified fat blends containing high levels of palm stearin (minimum 40%) when processed into table margarine. In the first part of the work, the effect of several reaction conditions on lipase-aided transesterification of palm stearin was studied. Results on the effect of lyophilisation of enzyme on transesterification indicated increases in % triglyceride (TG) when drying time was increased. The maximum yield was at 4 or 6 hours of drying. Studies on the effect of reaction time indicated that 8h of reaction produced the highest % TG remaining and Rhizomucor miehei and A lcaligenes lipases both showed maximum rates at 6h reaction time. The transesterification process also decreased the slip melting point (SMP) of palm stearin slightly after 24h reaction with R. miehei lipase registering the largest decrease (5.5°C) compared to the initial unreacted mixture. The catalytic stability of R. miehei and Pseudomonas lipases, after being subjected to ten runs of repeated usage indicated that the lipases can be reused to produce fairly constant products on a large scale. The rates of transesterification were found to vary with different lipase sources. Bacterial lipase of Pseudomonas was found to have the fastest rate of reaction (50.0h⁻¹) followed by R. miehei lipase (27.1h⁻¹). Generally, both the above lipases also produced the highest degree of transesterification and % FFA. Pseudomonas lipase-catalysed mixtures caused the biggest drop in SMP and solid fat content (SFC) in all the three mixtures studied. 1998 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8518/1/FSMB_1998_6_A.pdf Lai, Oi Ming (1998) Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases. PhD thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. Transesterification. Oils and fats, Edible. Lipase. English
spellingShingle Transesterification.
Oils and fats, Edible.
Lipase.
Lai, Oi Ming
Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases
title Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases
title_full Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases
title_fullStr Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases
title_full_unstemmed Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases
title_short Production, Properties and Application of Blends of Palm Stearin with Palm Kernel Olein, Sunflower Oil or Anhydrous Milkfat Transesterified by Lipases
title_sort production, properties and application of blends of palm stearin with palm kernel olein, sunflower oil or anhydrous milkfat transesterified by lipases
topic Transesterification.
Oils and fats, Edible.
Lipase.
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8518/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8518/1/FSMB_1998_6_A.pdf