December 18, 2018

Optical sorting: a brighter, better, and clearer view

By Dr Heike Knörzer, Petkus, Germany

The future of seed and grain sorting is a bright light.

Is it? Indeed, advanced optical sorting systems with divergent optics and illumination techniques are a booming trend. The range of optical sorting systems is increasing and more and more vendors are on the market. Sometimes, general promises such as steady sorting accuracy levels of >99 percent are proclaimed.
 


Theoretically it is possible. Often it is also practically possible. But as nature is highly variable and never constant, accuracy levels for all lots or sorting tasks of 99 percent are not realistic. But the fact is, that optical sorting can rescue production and prevent tremendous revenue loss.

In certified oat seed production in Europe, there is a zero tolerance for wild oat. A Spanish oat seed producer faced the issue of having 5714 kernels of wild oat in one tonne of mechanically cleaned oat seed (0.02 percent). The official certificate would have been labelled with “not certified”, as his own 5.5 kg sample analysis with 31 wild oat kernels indicated.

Ten hectares of seed production most probably lost and to be sold as commodity. With an average oat yield of two t/ha and a commodity price on the CBoT stock exchange with €250/t, the difference in revenue between commodity oat and seed oat would have been €5,600; excluding the higher price of the field production. With a yield of 5 t/ha, the difference would be €14,000. The sample was sent to the Roeber Institut GmbH, a member of the Petkus Group, in Wutha-Farnroda, Thuringia, Germany, where it was analysed before and after optical sorting with the Petkus OS 901 colour sorter with one re-sort cycle. Wild oat could be completely separated by the OS 901.

The “accept” fraction showed a purity level of > 99 percent. There were no kernels of wild oat left in the sample after sorting. According to the Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development’s Agriculture and Food Division (DPIRD) in Western Australia, the annual costs to the industry of wild oats was estimated to be USD 80 million, and wild oats having the potential to decrease yields by up to 80 percent.


Read more HERE.
 

The Global Miller
This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine Milling and Grain
which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.


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