9.2 SFE Run for Model Plant Material

Here’s a step-by-step, training-ready guide for running a Supercritical CO₂ Extraction (SFE) on a model plant material, designed for lab-scale demonstration, training exercises, or pilot optimization, integrating safety, analytical, and documentation best practices.


SFE Run for Model Plant Material

Objective: Demonstrate extraction principles, yield measurement, and component profiling using a representative plant matrix (e.g., lavender, rosemary, or dried leaves).


1. Pre-Run Preparation

A. Define Extraction Goals

  • Target compounds: e.g., essential oils, terpenes
  • Expected yield: approximate range from literature
  • Select fractionation strategy if needed

B. Safety Checks

  • PPE: lab coat, safety glasses, gloves
  • Confirm:
    • Pressure vessels rated above operating conditions
    • Pressure relief valves and burst discs functional
    • CO₂ ventilation active
    • Emergency stop accessible

C. Equipment Checks

  • Inspect seals, O-rings, tubing, and filters
  • Prime CO₂ pump
  • Ensure heating/cooling system operational
  • Data logger active

2. Sample Preparation

StepRecommendation
DryingEnsure moisture <10%
Particle size250–500 µm for leaves/herbs
SievingOptional for uniformity
PackingAvoid voids; use inert spacers if necessary
MassRecord exact dry weight for yield calculation

3. Selecting Extraction Parameters (Model Run)

ParameterTypical Lab Setting
Pressure100–200 bar
Temperature35–45 °C
CO₂ Flow10–30 kg CO₂ / kg feed
Time30–120 min (adjust based on curve)
Modifier0–5% ethanol (optional)

📌 Start conservative; adjust after analyzing extraction curve.


4. System Start-Up Sequence

  1. Fill extraction vessel with plant material
  2. Close and torque all fittings
  3. Start heating/cooling system
  4. Prime CO₂ pump
  5. Gradually pressurize vessel to target pressure
  6. Stabilize pressure and temperature before starting run
  7. Begin timed extraction, activate fraction collection if applicable

⚠ Never skip stabilization steps.


5. Monitoring During Extraction

  • Pressure & temperature: ±1–2% tolerance
  • CO₂ flow rate: constant
  • Fractionation separators: monitor collection
  • Visual checks: CO₂ leaks, unusual noises, vibrations

📌 Log all parameters continuously.


6. Determining End of Extraction

  • Monitor cumulative extract yield vs time
  • Observe plateau (CER → FER transition)
  • Stop run when:
    • Target compounds extracted
    • Yield plateau reached
    • CO₂/feed ratio target achieved

7. Depressurization & Shutdown

  1. Stop CO₂ pump
  2. Maintain heating briefly for fluidity
  3. Slowly depressurize extraction vessel
  4. Gradually depressurize separators
  5. Cool system to ambient
  6. Collect all fractions and label clearly

⚠ Rapid depressurization = risk of cold burn, equipment damage


8. Post-Run Sample Handling

  • Weigh each fraction (dry weight basis)
  • Record fraction ID, mass, and corresponding CO₂ usage
  • Store extracts under appropriate conditions (light-proof, low temperature, inert gas if needed)
  • Prepare for GC or HPLC analysis

9. Yield Calculation & Component Profiling

Total yield (%):
[
\text{Yield} = \frac{\text{Mass of extract (g)}}{\text{Mass of dry feed (g)}} \times 100
]

Component yield (%):
[
\text{Component Yield} = \frac{\text{Mass of target compound (g)}}{\text{Mass of dry feed (g)}} \times 100
]

  • Analyze fractions via GC-MS or HPLC
  • Report: yield, composition, RSD (≥3 replicates)
  • Compare against literature values or expected targets

10. Documentation (GMP-Style)

  • Record: batch ID, plant material source, drying conditions, particle size
  • Log all SFE parameters: P, T, flow rate, modifier, CO₂/feed ratio
  • Record fraction mass, yield, and analytical results
  • Sign and date all entries for traceability

📌 Ensure data are ALCOA+ compliant (Attributable, Legible, Contemporaneous, Original, Accurate, Complete, Consistent)


11. Learning Outcomes from Model Run

  • Understand extraction curve phases (CER, FER, diffusion-limited)
  • Observe effect of particle size, moisture, and CO₂ density on yield
  • Learn fraction collection and profiling workflow
  • Practice safety protocols and controlled depressurization
  • Generate data for QbD and scale-up decisions

12. Common Mistakes in Model Runs

  • Overpacked vessel → channeling
  • Rapid pressurization → stress on fittings
  • Ignoring stabilization → poor reproducibility
  • No fraction labeling → mix-up of data
  • Poor PPE → exposure to CO₂ or cold burns

Next Steps / Optional Modules

  • Fraction-resolved GC-MS or HPLC profiling of model plant extract
  • Comparative extraction of different plant matrices
  • Scale-up considerations (lab → pilot → industrial)
  • ROI & process efficiency analysis based on model run

If you want, I can draft a full SOP with checklist for a model plant SFE run, including step-by-step safety, monitoring, fraction collection, and documentation tables, ready for lab or training use.

Do you want me to prepare that?