Filtering waste vegetable oil

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Preparation

Waste Vegetable Oil (WVO) contains different contaminants including food particles, water, Free Fatty Acids (FFAs) and animal fats. Many of these contaminants can be separated before the actual filtration stage in a settling tank. Oil is generally pre-treated in this way for about three weeks, though this settling process can be accelerated by pre-heating the oil to about 60C. The animal fats and water and much of the food particle contamination will slowly sink to the bottom and the good oil can be extracted from the top of the tank and pumped into the filtration unit.

Note that filtration alone cannot remove Free Fatty Acids or other chemical or biological containments.

Filtration equipment

An industrial filter farm, driven by an air-powered pump (source: Goat Industries; Filter Farm 750)

Home built filtration plants often use cylindrical 10" filter cartridges, due to their low cost and easy availability. Several are placed in series, with gradually reducing micron filtration grades. These are often described as 50/10/5/1 or similar, denoting an initial 50 micron filter followed by 10 micron all the way down to 1 micron. Such systems are often driven by an electric pump such as the TAM105.

Industrial systems use much larger filter cartridges and often bank many in parallel to improve throughput, using air driven pumps to run the system.

The filter cartridges are typically rated at pressures between 0.8 - 6 bar, so thus care must be taken not to exceed the pressure rating for the cartridges used in the system. This can be done by means of a bypass on an electric pump, or direct control of air flow to an air driven pump.

The waste oil can be also heated to about 40 degrees C for faster flow, but again, care should be taken as cartridges are even more prone to failure when hot.