Processing of Oil Palm

Table of Contents

Processing of Oil Palm

The sequence of processes involve in the industrial/large scale extraction of oil palm to produce a  high yield of internationally acceptable quality. These are:

1. The reception of fresh fruit bunches from the plantations 

The quality standard achieved is initially dependent on the quality of bunches arriving at the mill. The  mill cannot improve upon this quality but can prevent or minimize further deterioration. Adequate  care should be taken during harvesting and transportation of the fruit to avoid excessive bruising;  resulting in oil of reduced quality.

2. Threshing of bunches to free the palm fruit 

This involved the removal of the fruits from the spikelets growing on a main stem. It can be achieved  manually using cutlass or axe, the fruits are then hand­picked. In a mechanized system a rotating  drum or fixed drum equipped with rotary beater bars detach the fruit from the bunch, leaving the  spikelets on the stem.

3. Sterilization 

Sterilization or cooking means the use of high­temperature wet­heat treatment of loose fruit. The  cooking serves the following purposes:
♦  Heat treatment destroys oil­splitting enzymes and arrests hydrolysis and autoxidation.
♦  Heat allows the oil­bearing cells to come together and flow more easily on application of pressure.  ♦ Fruit cooking weakens the pulp structure, softening it and making it easier to detach the fibrous  material and its contents during the digestion process. Making the oil to be released more readily.
♦  The moisture introduced by the steam acts chemically to break down gums and resins which cause  the oil to foam during frying.

4. Digestion of the fruit 

Digestion is the process of releasing the palm oil in the fruit through breaking down of the oil­bearing  cells. The digester is usually made up of cylindrical vessel fitted rotating shaft carrying a number of  beaters. Through the action of the rotating beater arms the fruit is pounded.

5. Pressing (Extracting the palm oil) 

There are two methods which can be employed in extracting oil from digested material. One system  uses mechanical presses and is called the ‘dry’ method. The other called the ‘wet’ method uses hot  water to leach out the oil.

In the ‘dry’ method, the oil is squeezed out of a mixture of oil, moisture, fibre and nuts by applying  mechanical pressure on the digested mash.

6. Clarification and drying of oil 

This process ensures the oil is separated from its impurities. The fluid coming out of the press is a  mixture of palm oil, water, cell debris, fibrous material and ‘non­oily solids’. Hot water is added to  the thick mixture in the ratio 3:1. The diluted mixture is passed through a screen to remove coarse  fibre.

The screened mixture is boiled from one or two hours and then allowed to settle by gravity in the  large tank so that the palm oil, being lighter than water, will separate and rise to the top. The clear oil  is decanted into a reception tank. The decanted oil is re­heated in a cooking pot and the dried oil is  carefully skimmed off from any residual moisture.

7. Oil storage 

The purified oil is transferred to a tank for storage prior to dispatch from the mill. The stored  temperature are maintained around 50°C using hot water or low ­pressure steam­heating coils, to  prevent solidification and fractionation. Iron contamination from the storage tank may occur if the  tank is not lined with a suitable protective coating.

Processing of Oil Palm

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