Separation of acylglycerols, FAME and FFA in biodiesel by size exclusion chromatography

Author : Kanisa Kittirattanapiboon and Kanit Krisnangkura

Journal : European Journal of Lipid Science and Technology, 2008, Vol. 110, Issue 5, pp.422-427.

More Information : http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejlt.200700164

Abstract

Size-exclusion chromatography separates solutes according to their molecular sizes. Free fatty acids (FFA), fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) and monoacylglycerols (MG) of vegetable oils or animal fats have very close molecular sizes and they cannot be baseline-separated on a single Phenogel column (100 Å, 300 mm × 7.8 mm ID, 5 µm) by using tetrahydrofuran (THF) as the mobile phase. When toluene is used as the mobile phase, triacylglycerols (TG), diacylglycerols (DG), MG and FAME are well separated but there is no baseline resolution between DG and FAME. In addition, the elution order of MG and FAME is reversed. However, baseline separation of all the above lipid classes can be achieved by using toluene containing THF, acetone, dichloromethane, ethyl acetate or acetic acid as the solvent modifier. Acetic acid (0.25%) as the solvent modifier gives the best resolution and all the reference peaks are symmetrical. The detection limit of each class of lipids is 0.1 µg. The correlation coefficient values (between 1 and 100 µg) of all the lipid classes are better than 0.99. Thus, the determination of biodiesel products in the biodiesel reactor is very much simplified.


Keywords

Acylglycerols, Biodiesel, Free fatty acid, Fatty acid methyl ester, Size-exclusion chromatography

Posted in International Journals.