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Green products from herbal medicine wastes by subcritical water treatment
- Source :
- Journal of Hazardous Materials. 424:127294
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2022.
-
Abstract
- Herbal medicine wastes (HMWs) are byproducts of medicine factories, which are mainly landfilled for their environmental problems. Only bearing in mind the contamination and concerns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and environmental emissions, the worth of herbal medicine wastes management and conversion to green products can be understood. In this work, subcritical water treatment was carried out batch-wise in a stainless tube reactor in the pressure range of 0.792-30.0 MPa, varying the temperature (127-327 °C) and time (1-60 min) of extraction. This resulted in new and green material sources, including organic acids, amino acids, and sugars. Amazingly, at very low extraction times (below 5 min) and high temperatures (above 277 °C), about 99% of HMWs were efficaciously converted to clean products by subcritical hydrothermal treatment. The results of hydrothermal extraction after 5 min indicated that at low temperatures (127-227 °C), the total organic carbon in the aqueous phase increased as the residual solid phase decreased, reaching a peak around 220 °C. Acetone soluble extracts or fat phase appeared above 227 °C and reached a maximum yield of 21% at 357 °C. Aspartic acid, threonine, and glycine were the primary amino acids; glycolic acid, formic acid, lactic acid, and acetic acid were obtained as the main organic acids, glucose, fructose, and cellobiose were substantial sugars produced from the aqueous phase after 5 min of hydrothermal subcritical hydrolysis extraction.
- Subjects :
- Environmental Engineering
SARS-CoV-2
Chemistry
Formic acid
Herbal Medicine
Hydrolysis
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Extraction (chemistry)
Temperature
Aqueous two-phase system
COVID-19
Medical Waste
Pollution
Water Purification
Lactic acid
chemistry.chemical_compound
Acetic acid
Acetone
Humans
Environmental Chemistry
Pandemics
Waste Management and Disposal
Glycolic acid
Nuclear chemistry
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 03043894
- Volume :
- 424
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Hazardous Materials
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e516c0e836c0d87056aa4df2c8e7c47c