Halimatun Saadiah Hafid
Universiti Putra Malaysia
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Featured researches published by Halimatun Saadiah Hafid.
African Journal of Biotechnology | 2009
Farah Nadia Omar; Aini Abdul Rahman; Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Phang Lai Yee; Mohd Ali Hassan
Organic acids produced from anaerobic digestion of kitchen waste were recovered using a new integrated method which consisted of freezing and thawing, centrifugation, filtration and evaporation. The main organic acid produced was lactic acid (98%). After the freezing and thawing process, 73% of the total suspended solids were removed and the organic acids were elevated from 59.0 to 70 g/L. The evaporation technique was used to further concentrate the organic acids up to 224 g/L. Using the integrated recovery method, the reduction of the total suspended solids in the solution achieved was about 93%. The material balance for the recovery process was also presented.
Waste Management | 2017
Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Abdul Rahman Nor 'Aini; Mohd Noriznan Mokhtar; Ahmad Tarmezee Talib; Azhari Samsu Baharuddin; Shah Umi Kalsom
In Malaysia, the amount of food waste produced is estimated at approximately 70% of total municipal solid waste generated and characterised by high amount of carbohydrate polymers such as starch, cellulose, and sugars. Considering the beneficial organic fraction contained, its utilization as an alternative substrate specifically for bioethanol production has receiving more attention. However, the sustainable production of bioethanol from food waste is linked to the efficient pretreatment needed for higher production of fermentable sugar prior to fermentation. In this work, a modified sequential acid-enzymatic hydrolysis process has been developed to produce high concentration of fermentable sugars; glucose, sucrose, fructose and maltose. The process started with hydrothermal and dilute acid pretreatment by hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sulphuric acid (H2SO4) which aim to degrade larger molecules of polysaccharide before accessible for further steps of enzymatic hydrolysis by glucoamylase. A kinetic model is proposed to perform an optimal hydrolysis for obtaining high fermentable sugars. The results suggested that a significant increase in fermentable sugar production (2.04-folds) with conversion efficiency of 86.8% was observed via sequential acid-enzymatic pretreatment as compared to dilute acid pretreatment (∼42.4% conversion efficiency). The bioethanol production by Saccharomyces cerevisiae utilizing fermentable sugar obtained shows ethanol yield of 0.42g/g with conversion efficiency of 85.38% based on the theoretical yield was achieved. The finding indicates that food waste can be considered as a promising substrate for bioethanol production.
International Journal of Green Energy | 2016
Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Nor Aini Abdul Rahman; Umi Kalsom Md Shah; Azhari Samsu Baharudin; Rabitah Zakaria
ABSTRACT Kitchen wastes containing high amounts of carbohydrates have potential as low-cost substrates for fermentable sugar production. In this study, enzymatic saccharification of kitchen waste was carried out. Response surface methodology (RSM) was applied to optimize the enzymatic saccharification conditions of kitchen waste. This paper presents analysis of RSM in a predictive model of the combined effects of independent variables (pH, temperature, glucoamylase activity, kitchen waste loading, and hydrolysis time) as the most significant parameters for fermentable sugar production and degree of saccharification. A 100 mL of kitchen waste was hydrolyzed in 250 mL of shake flasks. Quadratic RSM predicted maximum fermentable sugar production of 62.79 g/L and degree of saccharification (59.90%) at the following optimal conditions: pH 5, temperature 60°C, glucoamylase activity of 85 U/mL, and utilized 60 g/L of kitchen waste as a substrate at 10 h hydrolysis time. The verification experiments successfully produced 62.71 ± 0.7 g/L of fermentable sugar with 54.93 ± 0.4% degree of saccharification within 10 h of incubation, indicating that the developed model was successfully used to predict fermentable sugar production at more than 90% accuracy. The sugars produced after hydrolysis of kitchen waste were mainly attributed to monosaccharide: glucose (80%) and fructose (20%). The fermentable sugars obtained were subsequently used as carbon source for bioethanol production by locally isolated yeasts: Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Candida parasilosis, and Lanchancea fermentati. The yeasts were successfully consumed as sugars hydrolysate, and produced the highest ethanol yield ranging from 0.45 to 0.5 g/g and productivity between 0.44 g L–1 h–1 and 0.47 g L–1 h–1 after 24-h incubation, which was equivalent to 82.06–98.19% of conversion based on theoretical yield.
Planta | 2017
Farah Nadia Omar; Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Azhari Samsu Baharuddin; Mohd Afandi P. Mohammed; Jaafar Abdullah
AbstractMain conclusionX-ray microtomography results revealed that delignification process damaged the oil palm fibers, which correlated well with reduction of lignin components and increase of the phenolic content. Biodegradation investigation of natural fibers normally focuses on physico-chemical analysis, with less emphasis on physical aspect like fiber structures affect from microbial activity. In this work, the performance of Pycnoporus sanguineus to delignify oil palm empty fruit bunch fibers through solid-state fermentation utilizing various ratio of POME sludge was reported. In addition to tensile testing, physico-chemical and X-ray microtomography (µ-CT) analyses on the oil palm fibers were conducted to determine the effectiveness of the degradation process. The best ratio of fiber to fungi (60:40) was chosen based on the highest lignin loss and total phenolic content values and further investigation was performed to obtain fermentation kinetics data of both laccase and manganese peroxidase. µ-CT results revealed that delignification process damaged the pre-treated and untreated fibers structure, as evident from volume reduction after degradation process. This is correlated with reduction of lignin component and increase of the phenolic content, as well as lower stress–strain curves of the pre-treated fibers compared to the untreated ones (from tensile testing). It is suggested that P. sanguineus preferred to consume the outer layer of the fiber, before it penetrates through the cellular structure of the inner fiber.
Journal of Environmental Management | 2015
Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Nor'aini Abdul Rahman; Umi Kalsom Md Shah; Azhari Samsu Baharudin
The Journal of Agricultural Science | 2014
Tengku Roslina Tuan Yusof; Hasfalina Che Man; Nor Aini Abdul Rahman; Halimatun Saadiah Hafid
Bioresources | 2014
Noor Seribainun Hidayah Md Yunos; Azhari Samsu Baharuddin; Khairul Faezah Md. Yunos; Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Zainuri Busu; Mohd Noriznan Mokhtar; Alawi Sulaiman; Ayub Md Som
Renewable & Sustainable Energy Reviews | 2017
Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Nor Aini Abdul Rahman; Umi Kalsom Md Shah; Azhari Samsu Baharuddin; Arbakariya Ariff
Australian journal of basic and applied sciences | 2010
Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; A. R. Nor Aini; Farah Nadia Omar; Yee PhangLai; Suraini Abd-Aziz; Mohd Ali Hassan
Biosystems Engineering | 2018
Zamzuri Zabidin; Farah Nadia Omar; Halimatun Saadiah Hafid; Noor Seribainun Hidayah Md Yunos; Mohd Afandi P. Mohammed; Azhari Samsu Baharuddin; Taku Omura; Minato Wakisaka