Here’s a detailed explanation of Solubility & Selectivity in Supercritical Fluid Extraction (SFE):
1. Solubility in SFE
Definition
- Solubility is the amount of solute that can dissolve in supercritical CO₂ under specific pressure (P) and temperature (T) conditions.
Key Factors Affecting Solubility
- CO₂ Density (Pressure & Temperature)
- Higher density → stronger solvating power → higher solubility
- Small pressure changes near the critical point can significantly alter solubility
- Temperature
- ↑ Temperature → ↑ solute vapor pressure (positive effect on solubility)
- ↑ Temperature → ↓ CO₂ density (negative effect)
- Must balance T to optimize solubility without degrading compounds
- Solute Properties
- Non-polar compounds (lipids, essential oils) → highly soluble in CO₂
- Polar compounds → low solubility; may require co-solvent/modifier
- Co-Solvent / Modifier
- Small amounts of ethanol, methanol, or water increase solubility of polar compounds
2. Selectivity in SFE
Definition
- Selectivity is the ability to preferentially extract certain compounds from a complex mixture.
Factors Controlling Selectivity
- Pressure
- Higher pressure → extracts heavier, less soluble compounds
- Lower pressure → extracts lighter, volatile compounds
- Temperature
- Affects solute volatility and CO₂ density
- Allows selective extraction of heat-sensitive or thermally labile compounds
- Co-Solvent / Modifier
- Enhances extraction of polar compounds without dissolving unwanted non-polar material
- Flow Rate
- Low flow → longer contact time → higher recovery of selective compounds
- High flow → faster extraction → favors more soluble or volatile compounds
- Fractionation / Multi-Stage Separation
- Using separators at different P & T stages allows stepwise selective recovery
3. Practical Examples
- Essential oils: Light volatiles extracted at lower P & moderate T
- Wax, heavy lipids: Extracted at higher P
- Polyphenols / flavonoids: Require co-solvent like ethanol
Fractionation Concept:
- Separator 1 (high P) → heavy compounds
- Separator 2 (medium P) → medium compounds
- Separator 3 (low P) → light volatiles
4. Summary Table
| Factor | Solubility Effect | Selectivity Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Pressure ↑ | ↑ Solubility | Extract heavier compounds |
| Temperature ↑ | ↑ Solute vapor pressure, ↓ CO₂ density | Extract thermally stable compounds |
| Co-Solvent | ↑ Solubility of polar compounds | Allows selective extraction of polar solutes |
| Flow Rate | Affects contact time | Influences which compounds dominate extract |
| Fractionation Stage | – | Stepwise separation of target compounds |
✅ Bottom Line:
- Solubility determines how much of a compound can be extracted, while selectivity controls which compounds are preferentially extracted.
- By tuning pressure, temperature, flow rate, and co-solvent, SFE can achieve high-purity, selective extractsfrom complex matrices.
I can also create a diagram showing solubility vs. pressure and temperature, with selective extraction of light, medium, and heavy compounds for training purposes.
Do you want me to make that diagram?