■ Fats and oils
► | The high-ester (large molecules) family, which occurs naturally in animal fats and plant oils. | |||||
► | At room conditions, the fat may exist in the solid or liquid state.
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► | Fats are esters derived from the esterification reaction between one molecule of glycerol with three fatty acid molecules.
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► | The following animation shows the formation of fats and oils.
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► | The hydrocarbon chain may contain double bond(~CH=CH~) or only single bond( ~CH3-CH3~) |
The importance of oils and fats for the body processes
■ The importance of oils and fats for the body processes
► | Fat stored in the body as energy savings. | |
► | Fat acts as a carrier solvent of vitamins A, D, E and K. These vitamins are only soluble in fat. | |
► | The layer of fat under the skin protects the body from the cold. | |
► | Fat tissue around the internal organs of the human protects organs from injury. |
► | The common sources of fats are butter, ghee, cheese, meat, egg yolk, milk, nuts, etc. |
► | Fats are the main energy storer of the body. | |
► | When hydrolysed animal fats by steam under pressure, it gives a mixture of stearic acid and palmitic that can be used to make candles. | |
► | Vegetable oil can be used to make soap through the saponification process. | |
► | Certain type of oil can be used to make paint, fabric, oil and linoleum. |
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Saturated and unsaturated fats
■ Classification of fats
► | Saturated | |
► | Unsaturated fats |
► | Saturated fat is fat that contains saturated fatty acids.
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► | Saturated fats do not have double bonds and are solids at room temperature. | |||
► | Example:
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► | Animal fats contain high saturated fat content. | |||
► | The percentage of saturated fatty acids in animals fats are normally higher compared with the percentage of unsaturated fatty acids. |
► | Unsaturated fat is fat containing unsaturated fatty acid.
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► | Unsaturated fats have one or more double bonds and are liquids at room temperature. The presence of double bonding causes unsaturated fats have a lower melting point. | |||
► | Example:
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► | Vegetable oils such as palm oil, soybean oil, sunflower seed and olive contains high unsaturated fat. |
► | Both have 1 molecule of glycerol and 3 molecules of fatty acid. |
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► | The presence of double bond in unsaturated fats allows unsaturated fats undergo addition reaction. | |||||||
► | Hydrogenation is the addition reaction with hydrogen.
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Effects of eating food with high fat content
■ Effects of Eating Food with High Fat Content
► | Butter, ghee, etc. are saturated fats and oils are unsaturated fats. | |
► | High intake of saturated fats increases blood cholesterol levels that can lead to coronary disorders and high blood pressure. | |
► | Thus people who have a sedentary lifestyle such as old people should reduce the intake of saturated fats. | |
► | However, people involved in heavy labour, fat intake should be more, as their energy requirement is high. |
► | Cholesterol is a type of complex organic compounds commonly found in fat. | |
► | This is because cholesterol is a fat-soluble, transported to fat and stored in fat. | |
► | In fact, cholesterol can be synthesized in our body itself. Cholesterol is essential for the formation of cell membranes, bile salts, reproductive hormones and vitamins. | |
► | However, scientific studies show that consumption of foods with high cholesterol can affect human health. | |
► | There are two types of cholesterol, the low-density cholesterol (LDL) and high density cholesterol (HDL). | |
► | Research shows that low-density cholesterol (LDL) deposited in the arteries. | |
► | High density cholesterol (HDL) could be useful to our body. |
► | High cholesterol can lead to a disease of arteries, called arteriosclerosis. | |
► | Arteriosclerosis caused by the accumulation and deposition of lipids, particularly cholesterol (a type of steroid) in combination with fatty acids and proteins, as thick layers on the surface of the wall in blood arteries. | |
► | This situation, if allowed to continue can cause clogged arteries cavities and thus restricting normal blood flow. | |
► | Blood clots will cause heart attacks and cause a stroke. |
Industrial extraction of palm oil
■ Structure of oil palm fruit
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► | Mesocarp(husk) :
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► | Kernel:
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► | Shell:
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► | Sterilisation (fresh fruit bunch is heated with pressurized steam to:)
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► | Threshing
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► | Digestion
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► | Pressing
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► | Filtration
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► | Purification
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► | Extraction
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► | Purification
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The use of palm oil in food production
■ There are many uses of palm oil and palm kernel oil:
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► | Palm oil is a nutritious oil because it supplies fatty acids as well as important fat-soluble micronutrients like Carotenoids (including pro-vitamin A), vitamins D, E and K.
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► | Palm oil is cholesterol free. | |||||||
► | The extraction cost of palm oil is lower compare to most of the vegetable oil. |
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