Ion exchange resins for the food and beverage industry
Lewatit® ion exchange resins are an established and indispensable component in the food and beverage industry. Lewatit® S resins are certified in many countries around the world for the processing of food, beverages, and food and drink additives. The Lewatit® S series has, among other things, Halal and Kosher certifications.
Lewatit® ion exchangers and Lewatit® adsorbers play a crucial role in separation processes. Often there is no alternative to isolating, enriching, and cleaning valuable materials from the liquid phase. Lewatit® makes a decisive contribution to giving the products resulting from separation processes a purity, shelf life, pleasant taste, and good appearance that meets specifications.
An important application in the food industry is the processing of sugar. The large-scale production of crystal and liquid sugar, which is widely used in the food and beverage industry, would hardly be economically feasible without macroporous Lewatit® S types. The resins are used in the purification of raw sugar of various qualities. In addition to salt ions, they remove the yellowish-brown components that give raw sugar its color and typical taste.
For these and other applications, LANXESS offers a comprehensive range of special ion exchange resins that are tailored to specific requirements. Find the best product for your needs now.
Another important area of application for Lewatit® S grades is the starch industry. This produces high-quality syrups and polyalcohols on the basis of starch hydrolysates for use as sweeteners, e.g., in soft drinks. Lewatit® offers a large number of special ion exchangers for the desalination and decoloring (refining) of these syrups. The LewaPlus® Food module is a tool designed for the starch industry, which enables the calculation of new and existing desalination plants. The calculation of process costs is possible via the Food module as well.
Lewatit® ion exchangers also play a decisive role in ensuring product quality in other areas of the food and beverage industry. These include the processing of fruit juices, gelatin, whey, wine, and pectin.
The hydrolysis of polysaccharides and oligosaccharides is catalyzed by H+ ions. The splitting off of sucrose leads to a mixture of glucose and fructose, which turns polarized light to the left. This process is well known as inversion. The resulting mixture is invert sugar, which is processed into artificial honey and liquid sugar. Liquid sugar, in particular, has grown in importance as it is widely used to sweeten non-alcoholic soft drinks.
Nowadays, inulin is used as an ingredient in food production, for example in yogurt as a fat substitute and to improve the taste, texture, and mouthfeel. In sausages it is used to increase the fiber content. Inulin is one of the prebiotic food additives. It also serves as a base for the hydrolytic production of fructose and oligofructose. Inulin can be extracted from the beets of, for example, chicory and topinambur.
The salt-rich raw thin juices have to be demineralized by ion exchange resins. Mixed-bed arrangements with Lewatit® resins are used for subsequent polishing of the fructose.
Lewatit® MDS types are monodisperse ion exchange resins with a uniformity coefficient < 1.1 and a particle size ranging between 290 and 370 μm. The resins are commercially used in chromatographic separation processes with simulated moving bed equipment, e.g., sugar recovery from molasses, separation of glucose and fructose, size separation of sugar molecules, separation of organic acid, and separation of amino acids.
From raw materials such as corn, wheat, potatoes, rice, tapioca, etc., the starch industry uses enzymatic hydrolysis of starch to produce a variety of sweeteners. After the starch hydrolysis, Lewatit® resins are used for processing, e.g., of glucose and maltose, by demineralization and decolorization of the syrup. Proteins and residues of by-products can be removed as well.
For syrups with a high dextrose equivalent, such as B. dextrose and fructose (after isomerization), and also syrups with a low dextrose equivalent, e.g., glucose and maltose, Lewatit® resins are used in co-current or counter-current systems, preferably in double-pass/merry-go-round systems.
The commercial production of lactic acid is typically done by fermentation from different sources of carbohydrates. Food acids such as citric and lactic acid need to be demineralized after fermentation, mainly to eliminate sulfuric acid and sulfate ions. Effective resins for the demineralization of food acids are strong acid, gel-type Lewatit® S resins combined with weak base anion Lewatit® S resin.
Gelatin and collagen hydrolysates are pure collagen protein, which is obtained from animal raw materials from pigs, cattle, or fish. This raw material is collagen-rich tissue from animals, which has been approved for human consumption and which meets the requirements of gelatin and collagen production. The polypeptides contained in the raw material are treated with a gentle, enzymatic process until the desired molecular weight of the peptides is reached.
Depending on the enzymes and hydration conditions, the final product can deviate more strongly with regard to the distribution of the molecular weight or other parameters. In contrast to classic gelatin, collagen peptides or collagen hydrolysates have no gelling ability.
In order to meet the requirements of the food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetics industries, desalination and decolorization in combination with polishing with Lewatit® ion exchange resins may be necessary.
Pineapple juice, primarily from waste trimmings, contains roughly 10% sugar and extremely high quantities of citric acid and nitrogenous components. To allow use as canning syrup, demineralization and partial decolorization are necessary. In view of the high concentration of acid and salts, double-pass filtration is recommended.
Orange juice, either freshly extracted or reconstituted juice, is neutralized using weak anion resins. The resin reduces free citric acid as well as more weakly dissociated acid such as ascorbic acid and folic acid. To recover valuable ascorbic and folic acid, it is advisable to “overload” the resin in order to ensure displacement by the stronger citric acid.
Another specific application for adsorber resin is debittering of orange juice. Orange juice contains 20–30 ppm bitter components like limonin or hesperidin, which could otherwise be tasted.
DOWNLOADS
- Lewatit® Product Guide(PDF, 2.2 MB)
- Start-up Conditions for Food-grade Lewatit® Ion Exchange Resins(PDF, 1.8 MB)
- Winemaking process with Lewatit® Ion Exchange Resins(PDF, 823.6 KB)
- Lewatit® S 5221 – Food-quality Ion Exchange Resin for Anion Removal (PDF, 228.2 KB)
- Lewatit® S 5528 – Food-quality Ion Exchange Resin for Decolorization(PDF, 385.3 KB)