Separation of nonpolar lipid from soybean oil deodorizer distillate by stirred batch-wise silica gel adsorption-desorption

In this study, the stirred batch-wise adsorption-desorption was employed to separate soybean oil deodorizer distillate (SODD) into a nonpolar lipid fraction (NPLF) and a polar lipid fraction (PLF). Starting with SODD that contains 4.35% fatty acid steryl esters (FASEs), 1.92% squalene, 13.19% tocoph...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fabian, Cynthia B., Gunawan, Setiyo, Kasim, Novy Srihartati, Chiang, Chang-Ling
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/5106
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: De La Salle University
Description
Summary:In this study, the stirred batch-wise adsorption-desorption was employed to separate soybean oil deodorizer distillate (SODD) into a nonpolar lipid fraction (NPLF) and a polar lipid fraction (PLF). Starting with SODD that contains 4.35% fatty acid steryl esters (FASEs), 1.92% squalene, 13.19% tocopherols, and 9.22% free phytosterols, it was possible to obtain NPLF enriched with FASEs (19.5%, recovery 96.93%) and squalene (9.15%, recovery 100%). The contents of FFAs, TAGs, tocopherols, and free phytosterols remained in the NPLF were 11.59%, 1.36%, 4.83%, and 1.45%, respectively. The batch extraction employed in this study yielded about the same degree of separation as compared to that of modified soxhlet extraction. However, the advantage of the method of this study is that it can be scaled-up easily.