BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention :
[0001] This invention relates to a process for refining a fat. More particularly, it relates
to a process for removing and separating partial glyceride(s) and/or free fatty acid(s)
from an oleaginous mixture comprising a fat and the partial glyceride(s) and/or free
fatty acid(s).
Description of the Prior Art :
[0002] It is known that partial glycerides, in particular, diglycerides (DG) present in
a fat for hard butter would significantly deteriorate the physical properties thereof.
It is believed that this phenomenon is caused by the fact that DG inhibits the transformation
of crystals. Thus the presence of DG makes the tempering step in the production of
chocolate extremely troublesome.
[0003] A product obtained by, for example, transesterifying a fat with the use of lipase
contains DG at a high concentration.
[0004] These partial glycerides may be removed by, for example, column chromatography or
distillation. However these methods are disadvantageous from the economic viewpoint.
Thus there has been developed no process for removing partial glycerides on an industrial
scale hitherto (cf. Japanese Patent Publication No. 27159/1982).
[0005] Further, in the case of a fat for hard butter, it is necessary to remove partial
glycerides in such a manner as not to cause any change in the triglyceride composition
thereof.
[0006] Known methods for separating an oleaginous mixture comprising fatty acids and triglycerides
as main components, e.g., a fat having an extremely high acid value or a product obtained
by transesterifying fatty acids with glycerides, into fatty acids and triglycerides
on an industrial scale include alkali deacidification and steam distillation. Although
the former method, i.e., alkali deacidification can be applied to an oleaginous mixture
of a relatively low fatty acid content, it can not be applied to those having a high
fatty acid content since considerable amounts of the acids are incorporated in the
foots formed thereby to bring about a significant loss in the yield of the acids.
[0007] On the other hand, in the latter method, i.e., steam distillation, the fatty acids
and partial glycerides contained in the oleaginous mixture reside within a still for
a prolonged period of time and thus suffer from thermal changes in the triglyceride
composition. Therefore it is impossible to obtain a preferable triglyceride composition
thereby. According to Hickman's theory, the rate of thermal decomposition is doubled
for each 10°C rise in temperature and the decomposition rate is proportional to the
residence time in a distillation process in general (cf. Chem. Rev.,
54. 51 (1944)). Thus it is necessary to shorten the period of time during which the
oleaginous mixture is exposed to a high temperature, since side reactions could be
inhibited only to a limited extent by merely lowering the boiling point of the mixture
under a high-vacuum condition to thereby effect the distillation at a lower temperature.
[0008] In addition to the above methods, fatty acids may be removed by adsorbing the same
by column chromatography. Although this method is available in a laboratory, the high
cost thereof makes it inavailable at present on an industrial scale.
[0009] Further Japanese Patent Publication No. 40000/1986 teaches that free fatty acids
can be distilled off during removal of partial glycerides by molecular distillation.
However the molecular distillation in the above case is carried out using a falling
film type molecular still and the acid value of the staring fat is 10 at the highest.
It is impossible to appropriately treat an oleaginous mixture of a high acid value
containing free fatty acids at a high concentration by the method as described in
Japanese Patent Publication No. 40000/1986.
[0010] Free fatty acids may be removed from an oleaginous mixture by liquid/liquid extraction
with the use of a solvent. The liquid/liquid extraction (in particular furfural extraction),
which is known as a method for purifying a liquid mixture which can be hardly separated
by distillation, has been employed for deacidifying or deodorizing cod-liver oil.
Recently, however, liquid/liquid extraction has been scarcely applied to oleaginous
products, since it is difficult to handle an extraction solvent. In liquid/liquid
extraction, furfural and propane are frequently employed. Although it has been reported
that the liquid/liquid extraction with various solvents including those described
above is applied in fractionating fats and oils, separating highly unsaturated acid
oils or separating fatty acid methyl esters, there are unexpectedly few reports on
the application thereof to the separation of triglycerides and fatty acids.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a process for efficiently
separating and removing partial glyceride(s) from an oleaginous mixture comprising
triglyceride(s) and partial glyceride(s) as main components, without causing any change
in the triglyceride composition, on an industrial scale.
[0012] It is another object of the present invention to provide a process for removing free
fatty acid(s), if present, together with partial glyceride(s) from an oleaginous mixture
on an industrial scale.
[0013] Further it is another object of the present invention to provide a process for separating
free fatty acid(s) and triglyceride(s) from an oleaginous mixture which has a high
acid value and comprises triglyceride(s) and free fatty acid(s) as main components,
while minimizing the recovery loss and without causing any change in the triglyceride
composition.
[0014] These objects have been achieved according to the present invention by providing
a process for refining a fat which comprises removing partial glyceride(s) and/or
free fatty acid(s) from an oleaginous mixture comprising said glyceride(s) and/or
said acid(s) at high concentrations through solvent fractionation with acetone.
[0015] Furthermore, the above objects have been achieved according to the present invention
by providing a process for refining a fat which comprises preliminarily removing most
of free fatty acid(s) from an oleaginous mixture comprising partial glyceride(s) and/or
free fatty acid(s) at high concentrations by liquid/liquid extraction prior to the
solvent-fractionation: and subsequently removing partial glyceride(s) and/or the
residual free fatty acid(s) therefrom by solvent-fractionation with the use of acetone.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0016] The acetone to be used in the present invention may be either absolute or aqueous
one. Since acetone containing a large amount of water would lower the solubility of
a fat and thus sometimes cause liquid/liquid separation, it is desirable that acetone
contains 2% or below, preferably 0.5% or below, of moisture.
[0017] The solvent, i.e., acetone, may be used in an amount of one to ten parts (by weight;
the same will apply hereinbelow), preferably three to six parts, per part of the oleaginous
mixture.
[0018] It is preferable that the oleaginous mixture to be refined by the process of the
present invention comprises 2% or more of partial glyceride(s). Generally speaking,
the content of partial glyceride(s) of 5 to 6% or more would deteriorate the physical
properties of triglyceride(s), in particular, a hard butter. In contrast thereto,
the content of the partial glyceride(s) less than 2% hardly affects the properties
of the triglyceride(s).
[0019] According to the process of the present invention, partial glyceride(s) can be efficiently
separated from an oleaginous mixture comprising 5% or more of the same.
[0020] The oleaginous mixture to be refined according to the process of the present invention
may comprise 20% or less of free fatty acid(s). When the content of tree fatty acid(s)
exceeds 20%, it is difficult to concentrate most of the free fatty acid(s) in the
liquid phase.
[0021] The solvent-fractionation with acetone as effected in the process of the present
invention includes the following three steps: dissolving an oleaginous mixture in
acetone and cooling the obtained solution to thereby precipitate crystals: separating
the liquid phase from the solid phase, i.e., the crystals, and washing the latter;
and finally removing the solvent from each phase. In the first cooling step, 0.2 to
2.0%, based on the oleaginous mixture, of crystalline seeds, which have been preliminarily
obtained by supercooling a fat, are added to the solution at a temperature higher
than the crystallizing temperature by 1 to 8°C, while slowly cooling the solution,
thus accelerating the crystallization and giving crystals which can be readily separated.
The crystalline seeds may be prepared from any fat so long as it is insoluble in the
solvent under the above conditions.
[0022] When the oleaginous mixture to be refined according to the process of the present
invention has an acid value as high as 50 or above, it is preferable to pretreat it
for removing free fatty acid(s) therefrom to thereby lower the acid value thereof
to 40 or below, preferably 25 or below, prior to the solvent-fractionation as mentioned
above.
[0023] Examples of the above pretreatment include liquid/liquid extraction.
[0024] Examples of the solvent to be used in the above liquid/liquid extraction are furfural,
n-propyl alcohol, propionitrile, hexane, acetone, methanol and ethanol. One of these
solvents may be used alone. Alternately, a mixture thereof or an aqueous solvent may
be employed.
[0025] The liquid/liquid extraction may be carried out with the use of an extractor such
as a mixer-settler extractor, a spray tower, a packed column, a perforated-plate extractor
or a baffle tower, a rotary extractor, a rotary disc tower, a Scheibel column or a
pulsed extraction column. The mixing ratio of the oleaginous mixture to the extraction
solvent may be arbitrarily altered.
[0026] The extraction temperature, which significantly affects the extraction efficiency,
is preferably within a range of 10 to 50°C.
[0027] Thus it is possible to remove the free fatty acid(s) from the oleaginous mixture
by the liquid/liquid extraction to thereby lower the acid value of the mixture to
a level at which conventional alkali deacidificaiton can be carried out.
[0028] In the process of the present invention, the partial glyceride(s) and/or free fatty
acid(s) including DG are concentrated in the solvent phase, i.e., the liquid phase,
and thus can be readily separated from the triglyceride(s) constituting the crystalline
phase, i.e., the solid phase, by using acetone as a solvent.
[0029] The process for refining a fat of the present invention, which is not accompanied
by any change in the triglyceride composition, is particularly effective in refining
a fat having a concentration of partial glyceride(s) elevated by hydrolysis, or a
product having a high acid value which is obtained by transesterifying a fat with
lipase (EC: 3.1.1.3), which is a hydrolase for fats and oils, as a catalyst.
[0030] According to the refining process of the present invention, free fatty acid(s) and
triglyceride(s) can be separated from an oleaginous mixture, which comprises free
fatty acid(s) at a high concentration and thus has a high acid value, while minimizing
the recovery loss and without causing any change in the triglyceride composition.
[0031] To further illustrate the present invention, and not by way of limitation, the following
Examples will be given. Examples 1 and 2 each refer to a pretreatment step for removing
most of free fatty acids from an oleaginous mixture comprising free fatty acids at
a high concentration by liquid/liquid extraction. On the other hand, Example 3 refers
to a process for removing partial glycerides and the residual free fatty acids from
the oleaginous mixture, from which some portion of the free fatty acids has been removed
in the above pretreatment, by solvent-fractionation with the use of acetone.
Example 1
[0032] Seven parts of stearic acid and ten parts of the medium-melting fraction of palm
oil were transesteri fied in hexane solvent in the presence of lipase originating
from
Rhizopus delemar to give a reaction product which was an oleaginous mixture of a high acid value,
i.e., 84 and comprising 43% of free fatty acids. This reaction product was converted
into a trimethylsilane derivative and then subjected to gas chromatography. As a result,
it was found that the above reaction product comprised 39.2% of fatty acids, 0.3%
of monoglycerides, 6.3% of diglycerides and 54.2% of triglycerides.
[0033] The reaction product was subjected to liquid/liquid extraction to thereby remove
the free fatty acids therefrom.
[0034] As the extraction solvent, methanol was employed at a ratio to the reaction product
of 1 : 4. The extraction was carried out at 45°C. Thus the free fatty acids were concentrated
in the methanol phase. The two phases were separated with the use of a separatory
funnel and the solvent was distilled off from both the oily and methanol phases. The
yield of the oily phase, i.e., an oleaginous mixture was 60% and the acid value thereof
was lowered to 7.5. The recovery yield of the triglycerides was 89%.
Comparative Example 1
[0035] The reaction product used in Example 1 was deodorized in a conventional manner by
steam distillation to thereby remove the free fatty acids therefrom. The distillation
residue thus obtained had an acid value of 15, was significantly colored and showed
a largely altered triglyceride composition.
Example 2
[0036] The procedure of Example 1 was followed except that 15% aqueous ethanol was employed
as the extraction solvent. Thus the free fatty acids were removed. The yield of the
oily phase, i.e., an oleaginous mixture was 58.8% and the acid value thereof was lowered
to 12.5. The recovery yield of the triglycerides was 96%.
Example 3
[0037] One part of the oleaginous mixture as obtained in Example 1, from which same portion
of the free fatty acids had been removed to give a composition of 4% of free fatty
acids, 6.8% of diglycerides and 89.2% of triglycerides, was completely dissolved in
three parts of acetone containing 0.15% of moisture at 40°C to give a micelle mixture.
This micelle mixture was cooled under stirring while adding crystalline seeds, which
had been preliminarily prepared by supercooling 0.005 part of the micelle mixture,
thereto at 22°C (seeding). Subsequently the mixture was slowly cooled to 18°C to thereby
precipitate crystals. After further cooling, the mixture was maintained at 2°C for
one hour and then filtered. The crystalline phase thus obtained was washed to prepare
a high-melting fraction.
[0038] The solvent phase, i.e., the liquid phase as obtained above was completely dissolved
in five parts of acetone containing 0.15% of moisture at 40°C to give a micelle mixture.
This micelle mixture was cooled under stirring while adding crystalline seeds, which
had been preliminarily prepared by dissolving 0.005 part of the micelle mixture in
0.05 part of acetone and precipitating crystals at 10°C, thereto at 18°C. Then the
mixture was further cooled slowly to 2°C under stirring. After maintaining at 2°C
for one hour, the mixture was filtered. The crystalline phase thus obtained was washed
to prepare a medium-melting fraction. The solvent was distilled off from the solvent
(liquid) phase in a conventional manner to prepare a low-melting fraction.
[0039] Table 1 shows the yield and analytical data of each fraction thus obtained. The content
of each of the partial glycerides and free fatty acids was determined by TLC/FID method
with the use of Iatroscan TH-10 (mfd. by Iatron).
[0040] Table 2 shows the analytical data on the composition of the fatty acids at the 2-position
of the triglycerides of each fraction as well as those in the total triglycerides
of the combined fractions.
Comparative Example 2
[0041] The free fatty acids and partial glycerides present in the oleaginous mixture used
in Example 3 were removed therefrom by molecular distillation. The distillation was
carried out at a temperature of 250°C and a degree of vacuum of 5 x 10⁻³ Torr. In
spite of the fact that the content of the partial glycerides was lowered to 2%, the
triglyceride composition of the mixture was significantly altered (cf. Table 2). This
result suggests that transesterification might occur at the high temperature.
