The current research was aimed to corroborate as well as compare the feasible applicability of waste banana peel and empty fruit bunch (EFB) in synthesising high-performing heterogeneous catalysts. The solid acid catalysts originated from biomass wastes were employed for the synthesis of glycerol-free fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) using catalytic interesterification process pathway. Acetic acid was produced as the by-product instead of glycerol. The heterogeneous acid catalysts were synthesised utilising sulphuric acid through direct sulfonation with thermal treatment. The concentration of the sulphuric acid was manipulated from 2 to 13 mol L −1 to investigate its effects on the resulting FAME yield while maintaining the sulfonating ratio at 10 mL g −1 . The catalytic performances of the as-synthesised catalysts were studied under reaction conditions of 12 wt % catalyst loading, 50:1 methyl acetate to oleic acid molar ratio for a duration of 8 hours at 60 C. The catalyst produced by activated carbon derived from EFB and sulfonated with 13 mol L −1 sulphuric acid exhibited the highest FAME yield at 44.3%. The parameter studies on reactant ratio (45:1-70:1), reaction temperature (90 C-130 C) and time (4-24 hours) of interesterification reaction discovered a general increasing trend in the FAME yield up to 52.3% with the optimum conditions of 50:1, 110 C and 8 hours, respectively. The catalyst was recyclable with 82% of the catalytic performance retained after five successive cycles with catalyst reactivation. This study confirmed that the renewable heterogeneous catalyst derived from biomass waste This paper is an extended and revised article presented at the
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.