4.4 Article

Obtaining Hydroxytyrosol from Olive Mill Waste Using Deep Eutectic Solvents and Then Supercritical CO2

Journal

WASTE AND BIOMASS VALORIZATION
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages 6273-6284

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12649-019-00836-1

Keywords

Hydroxytyrosol recovery; Olive mill wastes; Deep eutectic solvent extraction; Supercritical fluid extraction; Green process

Funding

  1. FONDECYT de Iniciacion [11150255]
  2. Project POSTDOC_DICYT, Vicerrectoria de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion, Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Usach [0217111RF]

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The main objective of this study was to recover hydroxytyrosol from olive mill waste (olive leaves and a semi-solid waste with a 65-75% of humidity called alperujo). The recovery process involved solid-liquid extractions using two hydrophilic deep eutectic solvents (DESs), CIS-DES (a 1:1 mixture of choline chloride and citric acid) and Etagline (a 1:2 mixture of choline chloride and ethylene glycol). The results achieved using this non-conventional process was compared with the results achieved using conventional solid-liquid extraction processes using ethanol, methanol, and water. The extraction ratio (R) achieved using Etagline DES was 11.4 times higher than the R achieved using methanol. The hydroxytyrosol extraction efficiencies were higher when using the selected DESs than using methanol, under the same working conditions. On the other hand, with the use of DES it is possible to obtain similar extraction efficiencies to those obtained with organic solvents, but using 75% less extraction phase, when DESs were used instead of methanol. The DES extraction processes gave high re-extraction capacities when supercritical CO(2)was used as a stripping phase. The highest pure hydroxytyrosol extraction efficiency, 80%, was achieved using Etagline and supercritical CO(2)re-extraction at a pressure and temperature close to the critical values. The results suggest that DES is an efficient, safe, and sustainable alternative to methanol for extracting bioactive compounds from olive mill waste and that DES extraction combined with supercritical CO(2)extraction can be classed as a green process.

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