• How is Cs-O extracted from cottonseed?
  • CS-O can be extracted from cottonseed (CS) by microwave-assisted extraction (MAE), aqueous/solvent extraction (A/SE), aqueous ethanol extraction (A-EE), subcritical water extraction, supercritical carbon dioxide extraction (SC-CO2), and enzyme-assisted extraction (E-AE).
  • Which green solvent can be used to extract oil from soy bean flakes?
  • Another promising green solvent such as switchable solvent has showed potential for oil extraction from soy bean flakes . In addition, super critical fluid, deep eutectic solvents, natural deep eutectic solvents and supramolecular solvents are gaining wide interest and there is a need to study their applicability in oil extraction [11, 20].
  • What is the difference between cotton oil and cottonseed oil?
  • Cotton (Gossypium sp.) is a commercially important annual fiber crop; cottonseed oil (CSO) is an important product extracted from one of the byproducts of cottonseeds. Oil yield varies with cotton species, places, and season when cotton grown and extraction methods used for oil extraction.
  • What solvent is used to make soybean protein concentrate?
  • It should be noted that other solvents may be required to produce different and specific products; for example, an alcohol-water mixture is used in an additional extraction step (after hexane extraction) to produce soy protein concentrate (or ¡°SPC¡±) by removing the sugars from standard soybean meal (Wang et al., 2004).
  • Can green solvents be used to extract oil from oilseeds?
  • Adoption of green technology and solvents is the need of an hour, as these are promising approaches for oil extraction towards environmental safety. However, further research findings should substantiate the viability of these approaches for the oil extraction from oilseeds. SPJK has conceived the idea and authored paper on green solvents.
  • How much CSO is in cottonseed oil?
  • Clean and dry cottonseeds are used in oil extraction, and it contains 15¨C20% CSO depending on the quality and varieties. Oil percent is also dependent on weather, growth, and maturity of cottonseed, and oil yield also varies from the season to season and place to place of cottonseed varieties.