2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(93d) Extraction of Complex Lipids from Aqueous Streams Using near-Critical Dimethylether
Authors
This paper describes a process for extraction of lipids from aqueous feed streams. The aqueous feed stream is contacted with liquid dimethylether in co-current flow through a static in-line mixer. A separation step follows in which lipids dissolved in the dimethylether phase are removed from the top of the vessel. Non-soluble solids such as proteins and sugars, and any excess water, are recovered in a raffinate phase from the bottom of the vessel. The extract phase is depressurised to vapourise the dimethylether allowing recovery of the lipid extract and recycling of the dimethylether. This process can be operated continuously.
Examples are given for extraction of selected dairy and egg yolk process streams. Extracted lipids include phospholipids, gangliosides, and sphingolipids. Residual proteins in the raffinate stream are denatured to a varying extent depending on the processing conditions.
Results are given for measurements of dimethylether water phase equilibria, and modelling using the Wong-Sandler mixing rules with the Peng-Robinson equation of state.