Artículos de revistas
Separation of Sunflower Oil from Hexane by Use of Composite Polymeric Membranes
Fecha
2011-04Registro en:
Pagliero, Cecilia Liliana; Ochoa, Nelio Ariel; Martino, P.; Marchese, Jose; Separation of Sunflower Oil from Hexane by Use of Composite Polymeric Membranes; Springer; Journal Of The American Oil Chemists Society; 88; 11; 4-2011; 1813-1819
0003-021X
Autor
Pagliero, Cecilia Liliana
Ochoa, Nelio Ariel
Martino, P.
Marchese, Jose
Resumen
Vegetable oil extraction, as performed today by the oilseed-crushing industry, usually involves solvent extraction with commercial hexane. After this step, the vegetable oil–hexane mixture (miscella) must be treated to separate its components by distillation. If solvent-resistant membranes with good permeation properties can be obtained, membrane separation may replace, or be used in combination with, conventional evaporation. Two tailor-made flat composite membranes, poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF–Si and PVDF–CA) and a commercially available composite membrane (MPF-50), were used to separate a crude sunflower oil–hexane mixture. The effects of temperature, cross-flow velocity (v), transmembrane pressure (Δp), and feed oil concentration (Cf) on membrane selectivity and permeation flux were determined. The PVDF–Si membrane achieved the best results, being stable in commercial hexane and having promising permselectivity properties for separation of vegetable oil–hexane miscella. Improved separation performance was obtained at Cf = 25%, Δp = 7.8 bar, T = 30 °C, and v = 0.8 m s−1; a limiting permeate flux of 12 Lm−2 h−1 and 46.2% oil retention were achieved. Low membrane fouling was observed under all the experimental conditions studied.