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Essential
Oil Extraction Processes: Solvent
Extraction
Some plant material cannot tolerate the
heated forms of extraction such as steam distillation. High
heat damages these plants and once damaged, their essential
oils too are damaged and are no longer able to be extracted.
For these plants, as well as others, solvents such as ether,
ethanol, methanol, hexane, alcohol and petroleum are used
instead. The problem with using solvents to extract essential
oils is that most of the time, residual solvents or impurities
remain in the end product. Because they're impure, those true
to aromatherapy refuse to use them.
As mentioned above, there are times when
solvent extraction makes sense. This process involves a lot of
chemistry and is somewhat confusing to understand but in
general it is as follows.
Plant material is first washed in a bath of
hydrocarbon solvents. This process dissolves the necessary
plant materials including the aromatic molecules, waxy matter
and pigment and the dissolved matter mixes in with the solvent.
The solvent mixture is then filtered and distilled using low
pressure. After distillation and further processing, either a
resin or a concentrated concrete remain. Additional processing
using alcohol helps extract the essential
oils.
This is a very fast and cost-effective method
of essential oil extraction, but there is a downside. With
solvent extraction, residual solvents remain and their presence
can cause problems if used by individuals with allergies or
sensitive skin. That's another reason why essential oils
extracted using solvents are used in the manufacturing of
perfumes and fragrances, not in aromatherapy or skin care
products.
Super Critical Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
Extraction
The end result of super critical carbon
dioxide (CO2) extraction - one of the newest extraction
technologies - is a super-concentrated, high-quality version of
essential oil. This rapid extraction method uses lower
temperatures and higher pressure to transform carbon dioxide, a
gas, into a liquid. It's an inert solvent meaning that it's
non-reactive and therefore cannot form another chemical
compound. When the extraction process is complete, the carbon
dioxide is returned back to a gaseous state therefore, no
residual remains. All that is left is pure essential
oil.
Although this technology produces one of the
purest forms of essential oil, it is not yet widely used. The
equipment needed for this extraction process is very expensive,
which keeps production costs high. And because production costs
are high, so too are the costs of the essential oils that are
produced via carbon dioxide extraction.
Maceration
With this essential oil extraction method,
hot oil is used as a way to rip apart cell membranes. The plant
material is first saturated with hot oil and allowed to soak
until the cell membranes rupture. As they break apart,
essential oils are released into the oil in which the plant
material is soaking. When the release period is complete, the
plant material is removed from the oil. The oil that remains
then gets
decanted.
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