By Daniel Consalter

Palm oil, extracted from the fruits of the Guinean Elaeis, is the most produced and used vegetable oil in the world with applications mainly in the food and biofuels industry and it is the main source of solid vegetable fat a fter trans-fat banishment. Several varieties of palm are developed in Latin America to improve productivity and adapt to resist some diseases like lethal yellowing (LY), disease that is vanishing regular palm in Latin America. However, these varietals of palm produce fruit with variety and oil with different fatty acid compositions and physicochemical properties, which implies in challenges for extraction, esterification, refinery, fractioning, and final product production like chocolates, margarine etc.

The objective of this work was to evaluate palm oil from different varieties cultivated in Brazil using TD-NMR, H-NMR and GC-FID in a way to understand the impact of the new species in the industry and develop fast and low-cost methods for quality and process control. The results show the importance of characterizing the palm oil before the esterification and fractioning reaction due to the higher variability of fatty acid composition. H-NMR spectra showed important informati on from the oil in a faster and simple preparation like presence of diglycerides in some species and triglycerides and others. T2 and T1 could predict some characteristics of palm oil as fatty acid profile, FFA and iodine value corroborated with GC-FID result, so TD-NMR can be used as a low-cost, less time-consuming, and no-reagents methodology to analyze palm oil, which is essential for process and quality control.