International Conference on Cheminformatics and Computational Chemical Biology
Brisbane, Australia
Kamel Bouallegue
University of Gafsa, Tunisia
Title: Phenomenological Modeling and Intensification of Texturing/Grinding assisted Solvent Oil Extraction from Date Seeds (Phoenix Dactylifera L.)
Biography
Biography: Kamel Bouallegue
Abstract
ASE (Accelerated Solvent Extraction) and DM (Dynamic Maceration) were used with n-hexane to study the extraction of oil from date seed powders with different particle sizes. The intensification was studied with instant controlled pressure drop (DIC) as texturing pretreatment. DM yields increased from 4.57% to 10.49±0.05% dry-dry basis (ddb) when particle size decreased from 1.4 to 0.2 mm. For coarsely grounded seed powder, ASE oil yields were 11.35±0.05% ddb and 14.15% ddb for untreated and DIC date-seeds, respectively. Optimized DIC pretreatment allowed the smallest particle size powder to get 15.2±0.05% ddb as ASE yields, whilst the 2-h DM yields increased from 4.67 to 11.62±0.05% ddb for particle size decreasing from 1.4 to 0.2 mm, respectively. Fundamental analysis of various powders was achieved through washing-diffusion phenomenological model. DIC texturing implied higher washing stage, with relative starting accessibility 〖%δY〗_s of 70% against 55% for untreated particles. Consequently, the diffusion stage time was dramatically reduced, without great modification of effective diffusivity Deff value. Therefore, DIC ground seeds greatly enhanced the mass transfer mechanism. The evaluation of starting accessibility 〖δY〗_s enables to establish an empirical relationship between 〖δY〗_s and particle diameter 〖δY〗_s=f(D). Finally, DIC texturing did not imply any modification of the lipid profile.