Understand the importance and processing of vegetable oil in manufacturing soaps and detergents.
Comprehend the production process of soaps and detergents.
Identify major processes in South Africa that use coal and understand the production processes involved.
Grasp the cement production process.
Vegetable oils (plant oils) are triglycerides extracted from plant seeds or fruits.
A triglyceride is an ester derived from glycerol and three fatty acids.
Involves physical changes or unit operations in the extraction phase.
Chemical conversions occur during the refining or further processing stages.
Vegetable oils consist of hydrocarbons.
Unsaturated oils: Contain carbon joined by double carbon-carbon bonds, detectable with bromine solution.
Saturated oils: Comprise single carbon-carbon bonds.
Unsaturated oils tend to be healthier than saturated oils, impacting health based on their form at room temperature.
Bromine water is added to the oil; a color change indicates saturation:
Colorless = Unsaturated oil
Red = Saturated oil
Higher amounts of bromine indicate greater unsaturation in the oil.
The iodine value determines the degree of unsaturation in oils, fats, and waxes.
Unsaturated oils can absorb iodine; saturated oils cannot, resulting in an iodine value of zero.
Oils categorized based on iodine values (IV):
Drying oils (IV > 150): Linseed, tung.
Semi-drying oils (IV 100 - 150): Soybean, sunflower.
Non-drying oils (IV 70 - 100): Canola, olive.
Olive oil, avocado seed oil, coconut oil, sunflower oil, etc.
Notable oils: Soybean oil (28.6%), Palm oil (36.2%), Sunflower oil (12.8%).
Edible oils: Used for cooking and consumption; contain nutritional elements and require minimal processing.
Non-edible oils: Used industrially (e.g., in soaps, fuels) and may need chemical processing.
Edible oils: Cooking, flavoring.
Non-edible oils: Industrial applications, including biodiesel production and cosmetics.
Preparation Process: Planting, harvesting, cleaning of seeds.
Pressing Process: Crushing seeds to extract oil, resulting in raw pressed oil and press cake.
Extraction Process: Methods include mechanical (pressing) and chemical extraction (using hexane).
Refining Process: Cleaning oil involves degumming, neutralization, bleaching, winterization, and deodorization.
Seeds crushed between rotating screw and stationary ring in an expeller.
Cold press: Pressed at room temperature, retaining higher nutritional value.
Hot press: Involves roasting, producing less nutritious oils.
Involves hexane to remove oil from pressed cakes.
Degumming: Removes gums using water/acid.
Neutralization: Removes fatty acids with alkali solution.
Bleaching: Removes color pigments.
Winterization: Removes wax components.
Deodorization: Uses steam to eliminate odors.
Saturated fats can raise cholesterol levels, linked to heart disease.
Unsaturated fats (especially omega-3) are beneficial, helping to lower cholesterol.
Saturated, unsaturated (monounsaturated, polyunsaturated).
Importance of omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids in diet.
Transform liquid unsaturated oils into solid forms by adding hydrogen, increasing their shelf life and melting point (e.g., margarine).
Tallow, lard, caul fat, and leaf fat.
Soaps, greases, paints, culinary uses (e.g., coconut oil in soaps and detergents).
Free Fatty Acid (FFA) content, Iodine value, Peroxide value, p-Anisidine value, and more.
Each parameter ensures quality and stability of oils.
Managing organic waste and by-products effectively for energy generation or commercial by-products.
Improving production/storage control and utilizing residues for animal feed or soil amendments.