Use of Hansen solubility parameters to select supercritical carbon dioxide cosolvents for improved extraction selectivity: Case study on green tea decaffeination
José M. del Valle , Laura Cuellar , Roberto Canales , Juan C. de la Fuente , Gonzalo A. Núñez
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study explores the selective decaffeination of green tea using supercritical (SC) CO2 modified with ethanol and/or water as cosolvents based on experimental data in eight manuscripts in literature. We analyzed the solubility trends of caffeine (data from three literature sources) and epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCg) (data from a single source) using the Hansen solubility parameter (HSP) model to evaluate the solute-solvent interactions through the distance parameter R. We identified that the highest selectivity (favoring caffeine removal and EGCg retention) occurred at 70 °C and ≥25 MPa using pure CO2 and hypothesized that the addition of water facilitated substrate swelling and improved inner mass transfer. Ethanol showed limited benefits at higher pressures. Data for operational solubility were more in line with actual solubility than apparent solubility, although both were still dependent on substrate-solute interactions. Solubility measurements revealed a significant scatter in the data, particularly for caffeine in water- and/or ethanol-modified CO2, underscoring the need for better experimentally derived data. Despite these challenges, HSP-based approaches effectively identified conditions that maximized selective decaffeination while preserving EGCg content.
期刊介绍:
The journal publishes original research and review papers on any subject at the interface between food and engineering, particularly those of relevance to industry, including:
Engineering properties of foods, food physics and physical chemistry; processing, measurement, control, packaging, storage and distribution; engineering aspects of the design and production of novel foods and of food service and catering; design and operation of food processes, plant and equipment; economics of food engineering, including the economics of alternative processes.
Accounts of food engineering achievements are of particular value.