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Scanning electron microscopy leads to identification of novel nonedible oil seeds as energy crops

Mamoona MunirBiodiesel Lab, Department of Plant Sciences Quaid‐i‐Azam University Islamabad PakistanMushtaq AhmadBiodiesel Lab, Department of Plant Sciences Quaid‐i‐Azam University Islamabad PakistanAmir WaseemAnalytical Lab, Department of Chemistry Quaid‐i‐Azam University Islamabad PakistanMuhammad Zafar-ul-HyeBiodiesel Lab, Department of Plant Sciences Quaid‐i‐Azam University Islamabad PakistanMuhammad SaeedAnalytical Lab, Department of Chemistry Quaid‐i‐Azam University Islamabad PakistanAneela WakeelDepartment of Metallurgy and Material Engineering University of Engineering & Technology Taxila PakistanMoona NazishBiodiesel Lab, Department of Plant Sciences Quaid‐i‐Azam University Islamabad PakistanShazia SultanaBiodiesel Lab, Department of Plant Sciences Quaid‐i‐Azam University Islamabad Pakistan
2019en
ABI

Аннотация

Abstract Currently, exploration of alternative energy resources is hotly debated among the scientific community owing to rising energy crises and environmental issues. Biodiesel, as renewable energy source proves to be a better option and substitute to petro diesel. In this regard, nonedible seeds could be a better feedstock for synthesizing biodiesel due to their cost effectiveness and environmental friendly attributes. The present study, therefore, deals with the exploration and identification of micromorphologic features among eight novel nonedible oil yielding seeds via scanning electron microscopy (SEM) as potential feedstock for biodiesel industry. Light microscopic studies revealed that seeds size vary from 0.1–2.9 cm in length to 0.1–3 cm in width. Moreover, a great variation in seed color from black, green, and different shades of brown was also observed. Seeds ultra‐structure examination by SEM exhibit great variation in seed shape, size, color, sculpturing and periclinal wall shape and arrangement and so on. All the understudy seeds vary from rounded, irregular, subspherical, ellipsoidal, reniform, flattened, polygonal, ovate, pyriform, oblong, and globose shape. Seeds wall structure exhibits great variation from entire, angular, straight, irregular, polygonal, smooth, and elongated. The periclinal wall pattern exhibits variation from flat to slightly concave‐convex with straight, angular, undulate, or dentate seeds margin. Among the studied species only Argemone ochroleuca Linn. (Papaveraceae) possess micropylar peak, ridged raphe, and basal helium. The obtained results from the present study would therefore, suggest that SEM could be a useful tool in refreshing the veiled micromorphological features among different oil yielding seeds which in turn helps the researchers for their correct identification, exploration, authentication, and seeds classification in future.

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