Extract Oil From Orange Peel

published by aheed411 on Sep 19, 2011

British scientist to find an innovative way to turn to orange peel oil using the electric oven (microwave), led by the University of York works out to establish a company bearing the name of (OPEC).

British scientist to find an innovative way to turn to orange peel oil using the electric oven (microwave), led by the University of York works out to establish a company bearing the name of (OPEC).

And the Sunday Express newspaper said on Sunday that the world James Clark found that the electric furnace high temperature can break the molecules in the orange peel to release the gas, and then collect and drip into a product liquid.

The newspaper added that Clark used gas value extracted from the orange peel for the production of oil, plastics, chemicals, fuel and material pectin used to thicken jam, which turned it into fuel for cars and to the carbon used in water purifiers.

The newspaper pointed out that Clark confirmed that the microwave technique can also be used on a variety of waste of plant origin, for the production of fuel or other products, such as straw, cashew nut and apple peels, coffee and rice.

The newspaper said that Clark built an electric oven (microwave) at a cost of 200 thousand pounds in the Laboratory of the University of York, British, unable to process only a small amount of food waste, and plans to build a furnace capable of dealing with the largest 30 km of waste per hour.

I have decided to York University to establish a company on behalf of the (OPEC), an abbreviation of the name (company use orange peel), not related to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), with support from investors from Brazil and Spain for further tests on ways to make the most of the mountains of waste arising the manufacture of orange juice.

The newspaper quoted Clark as saying that the waste orange peel is an excellent example of wasted resources useful, and are kept half fruit orange waste after getting the juice in Brazil, which is the world’s largest producer of orange juice, and this is equivalent to eight million tons of orange peels, which can be used for the production of chemicals, fuel and other materials.

Source: UPI

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