Beside the total yield, a very important extraction parameter is what we can call the extraction power (
p). It can be easily obtained by keeping track of the product recovered after two subsequent pulls when not saturating the solvent (called
M1 and
M2 respectively).
p = 1 - M1/M2
Note that if the solvent is being saturated
p=0 and the info below does not apply until one moves away from solvent saturation (either by doing more pulls or by increasing the solvent volume). For non saturated pulls, as discussed in
this thread, the amount of product pulled after
n pulls relative to available product is,
Rn = 1 - (1-p)^n
The extraction power depends on the TEK being used. More efficient TEKs will give higher values of
p. Since
p is related to a ratio it is independent of the amount of starting product, and it is a practical way of comparing TEKs (or TEK steps) complimentary to total yield.
Interestingly, once a preffered TEK is settled on, there is a simple way to boost
p further by tweaking the extraction volumes. Let's call
Vs and
Va the volume of solvent and source respectively for a TEK with a previously measured
p value. Intuitively, increasing
Vs to a new volume
V's and/or concentrating
Va down to
Va' should help the TEK pull more product. Let's define the volume coefficient alpha as,
α = (Vs'/Vs) * (Va/Va' )
If using a dry TEK or pulling from solids, then the source volume
Va can't really be changed and one can take
Va'= Va.
It can be shown that the new extraction power is now,
p' = α*p / [1+p(α-1)]
Which is pretty cool I think.
This is interesting because if one knows
p for their favorite extraction, then they can consider changing the solvent and source volumes to make their life easier. They can also choose the number of pools to do so they are not over or under pulling. This can be done with the formulas above or by using the tables attached below.
The first table shows
R as a function of
p and
n. It can help guide the extractor to make sure they don't do too few or too many pulls (both these situations are in red).
The second table provides info on boosting
p with simple volume changes. Starting with a
p given by the first column, the table values give the volume ratio change
α needed to get to a new
p' in the top row.
Let's go trough an example. Assume we are following an A/B TEK using room temp Naphta. We calculate that
p=0.35 by measuring the product recovered from each of the first two pulls. After consulting table 1, we perform 7 total pulls to get to 95% of possible product recovered. Then, a few weeks later, we repeat the same TEK, however before doing the first pull now we consider changing the solvent and aqueous volumes to boost
p, since 7 pulls is an arduous task. Say we want to only do 4 pulls and get a similar result. A look at table 1 shows we need to get to
p'=0.55 to recover 96% of available product in 4 pulls. To make this happen, we look at table 2 and see that to increase
p=0.35 to
p'=0.55 we need to change the extraction volumes so
α = 2.3. To do this we can for example reduce the aquous layer down to 65% of its original volume and increase the solvent volume by 50%. This way,
α = 1.5/0.64 = 2.3
Under these new conditions, 4 pulls would retrieve 96% of available product. Notice that the total amount of solvent goes from 7*1=7 to 4*1.5 = 6 units. Not only are we doing less pulls and less work, but we are using less solvent (this can only happen if
Va can be reduced).
Disclaimer: These formulas have not been vetted independently. There could be mistakes at this time. If anyone is interested, I can post the derivation of the formulas.
Loveall attached the following image(s):
Table1.JPG
(108kb) downloaded 185 time(s). Table2.JPG
(123kb) downloaded 180 time(s).