4.5 Article

Pretreatment processes assisted subcritical water hydrolysis for valorisation of spent coffee grounds

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 8, Pages 5090-5101

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ijfs.15817

Keywords

Phenolic compounds; pretreatment; spent coffee ground; subcritical water; valorisation

Funding

  1. Pukyong National University

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This study investigated the effect of sequential extraction techniques and pretreatment methods in enhancing the recovery of high-value products from spent coffee ground. The results showed that supercritical carbon dioxide deoiling and subcritical water hydrolysis can improve the recovery of reducing sugars, total phenolic content, and total flavonoid content, as well as enhance antioxidant activities. Increased temperature promotes hydrolysis efficiency but also leads to the conversion of reducing sugars into 5-HMF and furfural. Particle size reduction can increase the recovery of chlorogenic acid.
This study investigated the effect of sequential extraction techniques and pretreatment methods in enhancing the recovery of high-value products from spent coffee ground. Supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2) deoiling was performed to recover non-polar lipids, and subcritical water (SCW) hydrolysis of deoiled spent coffee ground (SCG) was conducted involving pretreatment with ultrasound (US-SCG), and sample particle size reduction (PS-SCG). SCW temperature, solid/liquid mixing ratio, constant pressure and residence time were studied for their effect on extracting reducing sugars (RS), total phenolic content (TPC), total flavonoid content (TFC), 5-HMF, and furfural. Temperature increase enhanced hydrolysis efficiency and promoted RS dehydration into 5-HMF and furfural. At 180 degrees C and 40 mg/600 mL, TPC, TFC and RS values increased significantly with ultrasound pretreatment correlating with improved antioxidant activities by DPPH and ABTS assays. Highest amount of 5-HMF and furfural was obtained at 210 degrees C (highest temperature studied) with 44.71 and 2.36 mg/100 g. Chlorogenic acid recovery was the highest in the non-deoiled SCG (15.07 mg/100 g), with no significant difference observed in PS-SCG, suggesting an increase due to its reduced particle size. The results of this study provide comprehensive knowledge on the combined effects of integrated engineering systems to boost the valorisation of SCGs into high-value products.

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