Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent

The search for alternatives to petroleum-based fuels has led to the development of fuels from various sources, including renewable feedstocks such as fats and oils. Presently, most of biodiesel is produced from the edible oil and the quantity of non-edible oil is high due to underutilized and abando...

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Main Author: Muhammad Nazir bin Mohd Ali, Muhammad Nazir
Format: Final Year Project
Published: Universiti Teknologi Petronas 2010
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Online Access:http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/1160/
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spelling my-utp-utpedia.11602017-01-19T15:46:12Z http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/1160/ Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent Muhammad Nazir bin Mohd Ali, Muhammad Nazir TP Chemical technology The search for alternatives to petroleum-based fuels has led to the development of fuels from various sources, including renewable feedstocks such as fats and oils. Presently, most of biodiesel is produced from the edible oil and the quantity of non-edible oil is high due to underutilized and abandoned. Non-edible oils are defined as the vegetable oils that have no use in food processing for human consumptions. Jatropha, rubber seed and pongemia pinnata oils are examples of non-edible oil sources. Rubber seeds contain considerable amount of oil that can be extracted. The non-edible oil remains underutilized being side products of rubber plantation. The seeds are abundant over the wide rubber plantation in Malaysia and the oil can be converted to alkyl esters which can be used as biodiesel. As standard procedure after cultivation, rubber seed or Hevea Brasiliensis must undergo the oil extraction and transesterification to produce biodiesel. Nowadays, mechanical extraction is being preferred for large scale production. However, the solvent extraction method recovers almost all the oils and leaves behind only 0.5% to 0.7% residual oil in the raw material while in the case of mechanical pressing, the residual oil left in the oil cake may be anywhere from 6% to 14%. The solvent extraction method can be applied directly to any low oil content raw materials. Ethanol has been chosen as the solvent for the extraction. Using ethanol will give advantages since it can be obtained from renewable, and agricultural cultivated sources. The extraction of oil with different parameters is studied in this project. Hopefully, this study will supports the production of biodiesel from rubber seed oil in Malaysia by using solvent extraction with ethanol as the solvent. Universiti Teknologi Petronas 2010-07 Final Year Project NonPeerReviewed Muhammad Nazir bin Mohd Ali, Muhammad Nazir (2010) Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent. Universiti Teknologi Petronas, Seri Iskandar ,Tronoh,Perak. (Unpublished)
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Electronic and Digitized Intellectual Asset
url_provider http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/
topic TP Chemical technology
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
Muhammad Nazir bin Mohd Ali, Muhammad Nazir
Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent
description The search for alternatives to petroleum-based fuels has led to the development of fuels from various sources, including renewable feedstocks such as fats and oils. Presently, most of biodiesel is produced from the edible oil and the quantity of non-edible oil is high due to underutilized and abandoned. Non-edible oils are defined as the vegetable oils that have no use in food processing for human consumptions. Jatropha, rubber seed and pongemia pinnata oils are examples of non-edible oil sources. Rubber seeds contain considerable amount of oil that can be extracted. The non-edible oil remains underutilized being side products of rubber plantation. The seeds are abundant over the wide rubber plantation in Malaysia and the oil can be converted to alkyl esters which can be used as biodiesel. As standard procedure after cultivation, rubber seed or Hevea Brasiliensis must undergo the oil extraction and transesterification to produce biodiesel. Nowadays, mechanical extraction is being preferred for large scale production. However, the solvent extraction method recovers almost all the oils and leaves behind only 0.5% to 0.7% residual oil in the raw material while in the case of mechanical pressing, the residual oil left in the oil cake may be anywhere from 6% to 14%. The solvent extraction method can be applied directly to any low oil content raw materials. Ethanol has been chosen as the solvent for the extraction. Using ethanol will give advantages since it can be obtained from renewable, and agricultural cultivated sources. The extraction of oil with different parameters is studied in this project. Hopefully, this study will supports the production of biodiesel from rubber seed oil in Malaysia by using solvent extraction with ethanol as the solvent.
format Final Year Project
author Muhammad Nazir bin Mohd Ali, Muhammad Nazir
author_facet Muhammad Nazir bin Mohd Ali, Muhammad Nazir
author_sort Muhammad Nazir bin Mohd Ali, Muhammad Nazir
title Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent
title_short Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent
title_full Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent
title_fullStr Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent
title_full_unstemmed Extraction of Oil from Hevea Brasiliensis by using Ethanol as Solvent
title_sort extraction of oil from hevea brasiliensis by using ethanol as solvent
publisher Universiti Teknologi Petronas
publishDate 2010
url http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/1160/
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score 13.209306