Technology of Essential Oils: Presentation By: MR - Ramakant Harlalka

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Technology of

Essential Oils

- Presentation By:
- Mr.Ramakant Harlalka
VOLATILE OILS
Volatile oils are products which are generally complex in
composition,
consisting of the volatile principles contained in plants, and are more
or
less modified during the preparation process.

Only 2 procedures may be used to prepare official oils


i. Steam distillation
ii. Expression

4 Main types of volatile oils


i. Concretes
ii. Pomades
iii. Resinoids
iv. Absolutes
v. Essential Oils
Extraction Techniques
 Distillation
Techniques
 Special Distillation Technique
 CO2 Extraction
 GCMS Comparison of CO2 Extracted Oil
Methods of Oil Extraction
Aromatic Material
of Natural Origin

Aromatic
Essential Oils Maceration
Extracts
Obtained by with Alcohol
Obtained By

Alcoholic Solvent
Distillation Expression Tinctures Enfluerage
Extraction

Distilled Oils Citrus Oils Concretes Resinoids Pomades

Enfluerage
Absolutes
Absolutes
Types
Hydro

Distillation Steam

Steam +
Hydro
Hydrodistillation

• Herbs Are Put In Water & Distillation Vessel & Is Heated From Bottom.
• Most Flowers Are Distilled By This Methods .
• Eg :- Rose , Ylang Ylang. Tagate
 Water : its quantity in the still must always be sufficiently more ,otherwise the plant material

can over-heat and char.

 Plant material : it must be kept agitated as the water boils otherwise it may settle in the

bottom of the still and become damaged by the heating.

 Chopping or grinding the material into fine particles may help to keep the material dispersed

in the water.

 It is very easy for still ‘off-notes’ to be generated, since some components of the oil are more

susceptible to chemical change and oxygenated components tend to dissolve in the still

water.

 Some plant materials like cinnamon bark contain high levels of mucilages and as these are

leached out , the viscosity of the water increases and there is a high risk of charring.

 The stills tend to be small and therefore it will take a long time to accumulate much oil and

each batch may be highly variable containing better quality oil mixed with poor quality.

 Water distillation is a slower extraction process than the other two distillation types and

therefore less energy efficient.


Hydro-Steam Distillation

• In this live steam is injected in herbs kept in water.


• Leaves are normally distilled by this method.
• Eg :- Lemongrass , Palmrosa, Geranium.
Steam Distillation

• Roots & Woods After Crushing Are Used For Steam Distillation.
• Eg :- Sandalwood , Vetiver , Nagarmotha
• Yield Of Oil Is More Than Other Two Type Of Distillation.
ADVANTAGES OF STEAM & HYDRO
DISTILLATION
OVER HYDRO DISTILLATION
 Higher oil yield.
 Possible to achieve a high packing density because
the plant material is not suspended in the water.
 Oil component less susceptible to change due to
wetness and thermal conductivity of the still from the
heat source.
 The effect of refluxing is minimised.
 Oil quality more reproducible.
 Faster process so more energy efficient.
ADVANTAGES & DISADVANTAGES OF
STEAM DISTILLATION

 The amount of steam and the quality of the steam can be controlled.

 Lower risk of thermal degradation as temperature generally not

above 100 °C.

 Most widely used process for the extraction of essential oils on a large

scale.

 Throughout the flavour and fragrance supply industry it is the standard

method of extraction.

 Requires higher level of technical skill and fabrication and repairs

and maintenance require a higher level of skill.


Parameters Affecting the Oil Yield
 Mode Of Distillation
 Materials of Fabrication of Equipment
 Condition of Raw Material
 Time for Distillation
 Loading of Raw Material and Steam Distillation
 Operating Parameters
 Condition of Tank and Equipment
Site
 Availabilityof adequate water .
 Energy source: electricity, boiler fuel.
 Easy transport access
 Skilled and unskilled labour
 Close proximity to plant material
 Access to fabricators and machine shop for
repairs
 Environmental zoning, plant waste and waste
water discharge
Distillation Still

Mild Steel

Stainless Steel
Copper is material used from ancient
times till today .
There are few following
advantage in same
A) it can be repaired on site
B) with time cupper
appreciate
C) good conductor of heat
D) quality of oil distilled in
same is found to be better &
have sweetness in same so
liked in Aromatherapy.
Glass is another material of
construction but due to it's
brittleness same is common in lab
scale not on commercial scale.
Boiler
 Should produce enough steam to
adequately remove the oil from the
plant material
 Temperature is very important for oil's
quality as well yield.
 Low temperature leads to undesired
reaction like saponification ,
condensation takes place.
 Also color of oil is lighter if
temperature is low.
Condenser
 The role of the condenser is to
change the oil and water vapour
back to a liquid

 Two main types: coiled tube or


multitube

 cooling system where water is used


as coolant is very important.

 If temperature goes up un condensed


vapour escapes without getting
condensed.

 This results in loss of yield + partial oil.


Oil Separator
 Design of separator depends on density of the oil (if <1, oils are
lighter than water and float; if >1, oils heavier than water and sink).
Only a few wood and root oils are heavier than water

 Large enough capacity to allow the oil particles to form droplets


and readily separate from the water (recommended at least a 4
minute retention time in the separator before out flow)

 Controlling temperature can be used to improve separation

 Seek professional advice on design as poor separation affects all


the effort of distillation to extract oil
Storage of Oil
 System to filter separated oil

 Storage in suitable containers that exclude light

 Method to remove dissolved water (filtered bed of


anhydrous sodium sulfate or chilling)

 Removal of residual still notes and dissolved oxygen


(bubbling stream of nitrogen or allow oil to breathe
and topping drum to over flowing to remove all air)
SOXHLET EXTRACTION –
Coriander Oil
CARBON DIOXIDE / CO2
EXTRACTION
Solvents of supercritical fluid
extraction
 The choice of the SFE solvent is similar to the regular
extraction. Main considerations .
 Good solving property .
 Inert to the product.
 Easy separation from the product .
 Economical .
Critical Temperature Critical Pressure
Fluid
(K) (bar)
Carbon dioxide 304.1 73.8
Ethane 305.4 48.8
Ethylene 282.4 50.4
Propane 369.8 42.5
Propylene 364.9 46.0
Trifluoromethane
299.3 48.6
(Fluoroform)
Chlorotrifluoromethane 302.0 38.7
Trichlorofluoromethane 471.2 44.1
Ammonia 405.5 113.5
Water 647.3 221.2
Cyclohexane 553.5 40.7
n-Pentane 469.7 33.7
Toluene 591.8 41.0
Critical Conditions for Various Supercritical Solvents
 Use of hypercritical carbon dioxide extraction .
 Expensive yields good quality oils .
 Carbon dioxide becomes hypercritical at 33 degrees Celsius, which is a state in
which it is not really gas or liquid, but has qualities of both.
 Excellent solvent for extraction of essential oils.
 Low temperature required & process is instantaneous.
 The carbon dioxide is furthermore inert and therefore does not chemically
interact with the essence.
 To remove the carbon dioxide solvent, you simply need to remove the pressure
under which it is kept.
 This process has to take place in a closed chamber for the hypercritical pressure
required for carbon dioxide is 200 atmospheres - that is 200 times the pressure of
normal atmosphere.
 To achieve this type of pressure heavy-duty stainless steel equipment is required.
 High capital investment.
 CO2 is the most widely used fluid in SFE. However,
water is the other increasingly applied solvent.
One of the unique properties of water is that,
above its critical point (374°C, 218 atm.), it
becomes an excellent solvent for organic
compounds and a very poor solvent for inorganic
salts.
 This property gives the chance for using the same
solvent to extract the inorganic and the organic
component respectively.
Cardamom
Oil Different
Between CO2
& Steam
Distilled By
GCMS
Analysis of
Ginger Oil CO2
By GCMS
Analysis of
Clove Bud Oil
CO2 By GCMS
Compare distilled oils and solvent
extracted oils (ex: rose)
A) Hydro distillation:  B) Solvent extraction:
Rose being very delicate  A Common method for capturing &
hydro distillation with recovering volatile component high
controlled heat is boiling sesquiterpenes.
recommended in order  Resultant product from solvent
to prevent loss of high extraction of Rose flower is concrete
volatile component which is processed further to remove
which are responsible for wax & obtain absolutes.
nice odour.  Smell of both products rose absolute &
hydro distilled oil is very different
THANK YOU!

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