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Raw sugar manufacture

Brownsugarexporter.com - Sugarcane processing, outlined in Figure 2, is practiced in many variations, but the essential process consists of the following steps: extraction of the cane juice by milling or diffusion, clarification of the juice, concentration of the juice to syrup by evaporation, crystallization of sugar from the syrup, and separation and drying of the crystals.

JUICE EXTRACTION
After weighing, sugarcane is loaded by hand or crane onto a moving table. The table carries the cane into one or two sets of revolving knives, which chop the cane into chips in order to expose the tissue and open the cell structure, thus readying the material for efficient extraction of the juice. Frequently, knives are followed by a shredder, which breaks the chips into shreds for finer cane preparation. The chipped (and shredded) cane then goes through the crusher, a set of roller mills in which the cane cells are crushed and juice extracted. As the crushed cane proceeds through a series of up to eight four-roll mills, it is forced against a countercurrent of water known as water of maceration or imbibition. Streams of juiceextracted from the cane, mixed with maceration water from all mills, are combined into a mixed juice called dilute juice. Juice from the last mill in the series (which does not receive a current of maceration water) is called residual juice.

The alternative to extraction by milling is extraction by diffusion. In this process, cane prepared by rotating knives and a shredder is moved through a multicell, countercurrent diffuser. Extraction of sugar is higher by diffusion (an average rate of 93 percent, compared with 85–90 percent by milling), but extraction of nonsugars is also higher. Diffusion, therefore, is most used where cane quality is highest—e.g., in South Africa, Australia, and Hawaii. Occasionally a smaller “bagasse diffuser” is used in order to increase extraction from partially milled cane after two or three mills. (Residual cane fibre, after juice is removed, is calledbagasse.)

Disposal of the large amounts of water used by diffusers is a costly environmental problem, as cane factories that practice diffusion must operate their own primary, secondary, and tertiary water-treatment systems.

CLARIFICATION
Mixed juice from the extraction mills or diffuser is purified by addition of heat, lime, andflocculation aids. The lime is a suspension of calcium hydroxide, often in a sucrose solution, which forms a calcium saccharate compound. The heat and lime kill enzymes in the juice and increase pH from a natural acid level of 5.0–6.5 to a neutral pH. Control of pH is important throughout sugar manufacture because sucrose inverts, or hydrolyzes, to its components glucose and fructose at acid pH (less than 7.0), and all three sugars decompose quickly at high pH (greater than 11.5).


Heated to 99°–104° C (210°–220° F), the neutralized juice is inoculated, if necessary, with flocculants such as polyacrylamides and pumped to a continuous clarification vessel, a large, enclosed, heated tank in which clear juice flows off the upper part while muds settle below. This settling and separation process is known as defecation. Muds are pumped to rotary vacuum filters, where residual sucrose is washed out with a water spray on a rotating filter. Clarified juice, meanwhile, is pumped to a series of three to five multiple-effect evaporators. (BD)