In this study, the
direct conversion of wet oleaginous yeast biomass
to fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) using base transesterification
in the presence of an ionic liquid was optimized. The ionic liquid,
1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium ethylsulfate, was used to facilitate this
process and improved the yields of FAME transesterified directly from
wet biomass using potassium hydroxide (KOH) as a catalyst. Factorial
screening was first used to identify critical factors affecting the
transesterification yield, and subsequently, response surface methodology
was employed to study the interaction of methanol, KOH, and temperature
on reaction yield. The optimized conditions for dried biomass were
found to be 16.9 g methanol/g yeast, 0.056 g KOH/g yeast, 2 g [C2mim[EtSO4]/g yeast, and 65 °C, which yielded
97.1% conversion of the maximum FAME yield in only 2.5 h. The optimized
system was further studied to observe the reaction profiles and FAME
yield over time from both dry yeast and fresh wet yeast biomass containing
varying degrees of water (from 65 to 80 wt %). The ionic liquid was
found to improve total overall yield of FAME (96.9 ± 0.4%) compared
to the negative control without ionic liquid (69.6 ± 5.0%) when
wet yeast was used. While all the ionic liquid was recovered from
the reaction, it contained only 59.3% of the catalyst, suggesting
a heterogeneous catalyst may be more appropriate in future work.