What oil bleaching is
Bleaching — more precisely decolorization — is the third stage in the classic DBDW (Degumming, Bleaching, Deodorization, Winterization) flow of edible-oil refining. Despite the name, it is not a bleach in the household sense and involves no oxidizing chemical reaction. Instead it is a physical-chemical adsorption process: an oil-insoluble solid adsorbent is dispersed into the warm oil, undesirable minor components stick to the adsorbent surface, and the loaded solid is then filtered out.
The goal is to lighten and clean the oil after degumming and neutralization have removed the bulk of the phosphatides and free fatty acids. What remains are traces — colored pigments, leftover soaps, metal ions and early oxidation products — and it is precisely these traces that bleaching targets. Because the step relies on surface area rather than reaction kinetics, dosage, temperature, time and mixing all matter, as does the choice of adsorbent.
It helps to think of the adsorbent as a sponge with a vast internal surface. The impurities are present in tiny concentrations relative to the oil, so the contact has to be efficient: every gram of clay must meet as much oil as possible, and the impurities must have enough time and mobility to migrate to the clay surface and stay there. That is why bleaching is best understood as a separation operation — selectively pulling a few unwanted molecules out of a much larger stream of triglycerides — rather than as a transformation of the oil itself.
Why oil is bleached
Crude and neutralized oils carry natural pigments that make them appear orange, red, green or brown. The two most important pigment families are carotenoids (yellow-to-red, abundant in palm and some seed oils) and chlorophyll (green, common in canola/rapeseed and olive). Beyond color, bleaching serves several protective functions that are easy to underestimate:
The last point is why bleaching is sometimes called a conditioning step. By stripping soaps, metals and peroxides, it protects the downstream deodorizer — cleaner feed means better final flavor, color stability and shelf life. Chlorophyll in particular must be reduced, because residual chlorophyll promotes light-induced oxidation in the bottled product.
How the adsorption works
The active adsorbent is typically an acid-activated clay (a bentonite/montmorillonite treated with mineral acid). Acid activation leaches out structural cations and opens up the clay's layered structure, creating an enormous internal surface area and acidic sites. When dispersed into hot oil under vacuum, these sites bind polar and colored impurities. Carotenoids are mainly removed by physical adsorption onto this high surface, while some pigments and oxidation products are partly broken down on the acidic clay surface.
Two operating conditions are non-negotiable for quality. First, the contact happens under vacuum (typically ~50–100 mbar). Hot oil exposed to air would oxidize rapidly, and the acidic clay can catalyze that oxidation, so the vacuum keeps oxygen away. Second, the system runs hot enough (~90–110°C) to lower oil viscosity and speed diffusion of impurities to the clay surface, but not so hot that it fixes color or degrades the oil. Adequate agitation keeps the fine clay suspended so its full surface is used. The sequence is intensive mixing and contact, then complete filtration to recover bright, clay-free oil.
Adsorbents used
Most refineries rely on bleaching earth as the workhorse, occasionally blended with other adsorbents to target specific impurities. The table below summarizes the typical options and their roles.
| Adsorbent | Primary role | Notes (typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Acid-activated bleaching earth (bentonite/clay) | Pigments, soaps, metals, oxidation products | Most common; high surface area and acidic sites; the default workhorse |
| Natural (neutral) clay | Mild color and soap removal | Lower activity; gentler on the oil; used where high activity is unnecessary |
| Activated carbon | Polycyclic aromatic and stubborn dark pigments | Added in small fractions; high oil retention, so dosed sparingly |
| Silica (synthetic amorphous) | Soaps, phosphatides, trace metals | Often a pre-step that spares the clay and extends filter life |
Adsorbent choice is an economic and quality trade-off. A more active clay decolorizes with less dosage but costs more and may strip valuable tocopherols if overdosed; a milder clay is cheaper but needs higher dosage. Silica pretreatment is increasingly common because it removes soaps and metals efficiently, letting the clay focus on color and reducing total adsorbent use.

Video: edible-oil refinery operation (third-party).
Process steps
A typical batch or semi-continuous bleaching cycle follows four stages. In continuous plants these run as a flow through a slurry mixer, a bleacher vessel and a filtration train rather than as discrete time blocks, but the logical sequence is the same.
- Dose and slurry. Metered bleaching earth (typically ~0.5–2% of oil weight, up to ~3% for difficult oils such as palm) is added to the heated, dried oil and dispersed into a uniform slurry.
- Contact under vacuum. The slurry is held at ~90–110°C under ~50–100 mbar vacuum for about 20–30 minutes with agitation so impurities adsorb onto the clay while oxygen is excluded.
- Filter. The slurry passes through a filter press or pressure-leaf filter to separate the spent clay and yield a bright, clear oil; the first cloudy runnings are recirculated until clarity is reached.
- Polish and forward. The filtered oil is polished (a fine guard filter) to catch any clay fines, then sent on to deodorization as a clean, light-colored feed.
Key parameters
The four levers below define a bleaching operation. All values are typical, approximate ranges — the exact set point depends on the oil type, the incoming pigment load and the adsorbent grade.
These interact. Higher pigment loads push dosage up; effective vacuum and drying let you run a little hotter without oxidation penalty; good mixing lets you reach target color at the low end of the dosage range, which in turn reduces oil lost in the spent clay. The art of bleaching is hitting the color target with the minimum adsorbent, because every kilogram of clay carries oil away with it.
Spent clay handling and safety
Filtered-out clay is not inert waste — it is a genuine process hazard that deserves explicit attention. Spent bleaching earth retains roughly 25–40% of its weight as oil, which is both a yield loss and a safety problem.
Good practice is to cool the cake before disposal, blanket or de-oxygenate where feasible, and move it out promptly rather than accumulating it. Because of the retained oil, some plants steam-strip or solvent-recover part of that oil before disposal, both to cut losses and to make the residue less reactive. The oil locked in spent clay is also the main reason for dosing the minimum effective amount of adsorbent in the first place. A common operating habit is to blow the filter cake with steam or inert gas at the end of each cycle, which strips some of the entrained oil back into the product and leaves the discharged clay drier, lighter and less prone to self-heating. Tracking the residual oil in the cake is therefore both a yield metric and a safety metric, and it is one of the simplest indicators of whether a bleaching section is being run efficiently.
Common problems
Most bleaching troubles trace back to upstream pretreatment or to operating outside the typical windows above:
| Symptom | Likely cause | Typical remedy |
|---|---|---|
| Color too dark after bleaching | Under-dosed clay, wrong adsorbent grade, or high incoming pigment | Increase dosage, switch to a more active clay, or improve degumming |
| High oxidation / off flavor | Vacuum leak or wet oil letting oxygen and moisture in | Fix vacuum, dry oil before contact, verify temperature is not excessive |
| Cloudy or soapy filtered oil | Residual soaps/gums overloading the clay; poor filtration | Add silica pre-step, improve neutralization/washing, recirculate filter runnings |
| Excess oil lost in spent clay | Over-dosing adsorbent or poor cake blowing | Optimize dosage, blow cake dry with steam/gas before discharge |
Bleaching also depends heavily on what came before it. Thorough degumming and clean neutralization reduce the soap and gum load reaching the clay, so the adsorbent can be spent on color rather than mopping up upstream carryover. Done well, bleaching hands a bright, low-metal, low-peroxide feed to deodorization, the final polishing step — see the full edible oil refining guide for how the stages fit together.