Optimizing the antioxidant biocompound recovery from peach waste extraction assisted by ultrasounds or microwaves

•Peach juice waste is a source of antioxidant bioactive compounds.•Peach waste drying causes flavonoid, anthocyanin and vitamin C loss.•Ultrasounds and microwave can assist the extraction of peach waste bioactive compounds.•Ultrasounds develop higher energy in a larger time than microwaves.•Microwav...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Ultrasonics sonochemistry 2020-05, Vol.63, p.104954-104954, Article 104954
Hauptverfasser: Plazzotta, S., Ibarz, R., Manzocco, L., Martín-Belloso, O.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•Peach juice waste is a source of antioxidant bioactive compounds.•Peach waste drying causes flavonoid, anthocyanin and vitamin C loss.•Ultrasounds and microwave can assist the extraction of peach waste bioactive compounds.•Ultrasounds develop higher energy in a larger time than microwaves.•Microwaves could have lower environmental impact than ultrasounds on industrial scale. The possibility to valorize peach juice waste, either frozen or air-dried, through microwave (MAE) and ultrasound assisted extraction (UAE) was evaluated. MAE power, UAE amplitude and time were optimized using a 22-factorial design. For frozen waste, optimal MAE (540 W, 50 s) and UAE (23%, 120 s) processes gave extracts presenting analogous content (on 100 g dry matter) of polyphenols (309–317 mg GAE), flavonoids (94–120 mg QE), anthocyanins (8–9 mg CGE), and similar antioxidant activity (2.1–2.2 mg TE). Extracts from dried waste resulted higher in polyphenols (630–670 mg GAE) but lower in flavonoids (75–90 mg QE), anthocyanins and vitamin C (not detectable). Although developing an energy density 2-fold higher than that of UAE, MAE more efficaciously extracted vitamin C (108 mg/100 g dm) and required half extraction time (50 s). MAE would also be less impactful than UAE in terms of greenhouse gas emission and energy requirements on industrial scale. The industrial valorization of peach waste through the application of microwave or ultrasound assisted extraction requires quantitative data, able to encourage company interest and investment. This study not only identifies optimal MAE and UAE parameters to assist the extraction of peach waste bioactive compounds but also provides a preliminary estimation of the potential economic and environmental impact on an industrial scale of these technologies.
ISSN:1350-4177
1873-2828
DOI:10.1016/j.ultsonch.2019.104954