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Ultrasound-assisted extraction of clove buds using batch- and flow-reactors: A comparative study on a pilot scale.

Authors :
Alexandru, Lavinia
Cravotto, Giancarlo
Giordana, Luca
Binello, Arianna
Chemat, Farid
Source :
Innovative Food Science & Emerging Technologies. Oct2013, Vol. 20, p167-172. 6p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

This study will assess the efficiency of both batch and flow ultrasonic reactors (20L in 45min) in carrying out the ultrasound-assisted extraction of dry clove buds and compare these more recent methods with classic maceration. Flow ultrasound-assisted extraction was carried out in a new multi-horn reactor working in continuous flow mode (450, 900, 1350mL/min) and at high power density (about 700W/L vs 18W/L in batch). The specific energy input was a slightly lower in flow procedure 47.2kJ/L vs 48.6kJ/L in batch reactor. Total phenolic compound content ranged from 191±1 to 215±3mg gallic acid equivalents/L of extract. The best results were obtained under flow ultrasound-assisted extraction operating at 1350mL/min (highest phenolic content and best radical scavenging activity). Clove bud volatiles from hydroalcoholic extracts were separated and identified using hyphenated headspace gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. We herein show that the development of large-scale multiple transducer flow reactors operating at high power density allows noteworthy process intensification. Industrial relevance: This piece of work was carried out thanks to the investment of Pernod-Richard Italia, an international company worldwide known in the field of liqueurs and wines. Considering the huge amount of plant extracts required by this type of production, only flow systems may be suitable for scaling up. The results of this investigation on pilot reactors pave the road for the set up of an industrial plant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14668564
Volume :
20
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Innovative Food Science & Emerging Technologies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
92731290
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ifset.2013.07.011