AFRICAN DRYING OILS. IV. COMPONENT SUNFLOWER SEED OIL. ACIDS OF SOME LINOLEIC-RICH OILS. Ug C. BAHKEH, A. CROSSLEY. 1 ' . 1' . HlLDlTCCI The fatty oils from ten specimens of African sunflower sccd from widcly different areas, and an Argcntine sunflowcr seed oil have been studicd. The iodine values o
African drying oils. I. The seed oil oftetracarpidum conophorum
β Scribed by Gunstone, F. D. ;Hilditch, T. P. ;Riley, J. P.
- Book ID
- 102327198
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1947
- Weight
- 477 KB
- Volume
- 66
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0368-4075
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The seed fat of Tetracarpidium conophorum is a drying oil (iodine value 200β205) the component acids of which are linolenic 64β68, linoleic 10β12, oleic 10β11, and saturated acids 10β12% (wt.). The high content of linolenic acid (which exceeds that (50β55%) in linseed oil) and the correspondingly high proportion (about 75%) of glycerides containing either two or three linolenic groups point to this oil as superior in drying properties to linseed oil. It forms a clear, hard film on exposure to air. The Tetracarpidium shrub is of fairly rapid growth and is already cultivated for native edible purposes in Southern Nigeria and adjacent regions; its development as a technical source of oilβseed appears feasible. Since, however, the seed tissues are exceptionally rich in lipase, formation of free fatty acid proceeds rapidly in the dried kernels, and it will be essential to destroy the enzymes by heating the kernels at 100Β° before they are stored for export to this country or elsewhere for oil extraction.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
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