Capacity of an Acid-activated Somas Bentonite in the Bleaching of Soybean Oil

- Organization:
- International Mineral Processing Congress
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 148 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2014
Abstract
The bleaching of edible oils, industrial oils, and some chemicals may be achieved using natural and acid-activated clays. These materials remove impurities and pigments from the oils. In this work, a bentonite clay from Turkey (Somas bentonite) was activated with different concentration of H2SO4 and HCl at 70~90°C and 5~8 hours. Under these conditions several cations were removed from natural bentonite (Al, Mg, and Fe) and DTA-TGA, FT-IR curves of the solids obtained after acid treatment were examined. Treatment time and acid concentration increased the degree of destruction of the bentonite structure which was determined by ICP. Activated samples were tested in order to verify their capacity to bleach soybean oil and compared to standard commercial bleaching clays. The experimental results indicate that treated samples with H2SO4 have the same efficient in bleaching crude soybean oil with the standards and treated sample with HCl is more efficient in bleaching than the commercial products.
Citation
APA:
(2014) Capacity of an Acid-activated Somas Bentonite in the Bleaching of Soybean OilMLA: Capacity of an Acid-activated Somas Bentonite in the Bleaching of Soybean Oil. International Mineral Processing Congress, 2014.