Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study

Grapes are the world's second largest produced fruit crop, with an annual production of 77 million tons in 2013 [1]. Among grapes processing industries, wineries induce approximately 10 million tons of byproducts per year, mostly pomace and lees [2]. Nowadays, the management and the valorization of food industry wastes constitute an economical, environmental and social challenge. It turns out that grape based products such as grape pomace contain a high amount of polyphenols, well known for their biological activities [3]. Thus, the extraction and purification of those high added value compounds from grape pomace are of great interest for cosmetic, nutraceutical and other chemical industries. Membrane technologies, well-known for their several advantages (low environmental impact, no solvent utilization, high selectivity, etc.), can be used to recover different classes of phenolic compounds from pomace extract, according to their molecular weights. In food industries, crossflow filtration is generally performed using tubular mineral membranes under high crossflow velocities [4, 5]. However, immersed organic hollow-fiber membrane process could be interestingly used as an alternative separation technique for such application, notably due to the significant reduction of the energy consumption [6]. In this context, the aim of this work was to provide reliable information to develop a convenient immersed hollow-fiber membranes pilot for the isolation of polyphenols from grape pomace extracts. Therefore, lab-scale experiments were performed using a frontal filtration module in order to identify the main parameters governing the separation efficiency. Three factors known to impact membrane performances were considered and tested: (i) the membrane average pores diameter or molecular weight cut-off (0.1 μm 100 kDa 10 kDa polyethersulfone membrane), (ii) the physiochemical characteristics of pomace extracts (particles size distribution, turbidity, etc.) and (iii) the hydrodynamic conditions, namely shear stress. In order to identify the optimal operating conditions for the pilot-scale filtration, the performances of lab-scale filtration were particularly studied in terms of fouling mechanisms (productivity) and phenolic compounds separation (selectivity).

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Main Authors: Rouquie, Camille, Dahdouh, Layal, Delalonde, Michèle, Wisniewski, Christelle
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Formatex Research Center
Subjects:Q02 - Traitement et conservation des produits alimentaires, Q04 - Composition des produits alimentaires,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585220/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585220/1/ID585220.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5852202022-04-15T14:16:22Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585220/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585220/ Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study. Rouquie Camille, Dahdouh Layal, Delalonde Michèle, Wisniewski Christelle. 2016. In : Book of abstracts of the food factor 1 Barcelona conference, 2-4 November 2016, Barcelona (Spain). Formatex. Barcelona : Formatex Research Center, Résumé, 153. The food factor 1 Barcelona conference: Established, emerging and exploratory food science and technology. 1, Barcelone, Espagne, 2 Novembre 2016/4 Novembre 2016. Researchers Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study Rouquie, Camille Dahdouh, Layal Delalonde, Michèle Wisniewski, Christelle eng 2016 Formatex Research Center Book of abstracts of the food factor 1 Barcelona conference, 2-4 November 2016, Barcelona (Spain) Q02 - Traitement et conservation des produits alimentaires Q04 - Composition des produits alimentaires Grapes are the world's second largest produced fruit crop, with an annual production of 77 million tons in 2013 [1]. Among grapes processing industries, wineries induce approximately 10 million tons of byproducts per year, mostly pomace and lees [2]. Nowadays, the management and the valorization of food industry wastes constitute an economical, environmental and social challenge. It turns out that grape based products such as grape pomace contain a high amount of polyphenols, well known for their biological activities [3]. Thus, the extraction and purification of those high added value compounds from grape pomace are of great interest for cosmetic, nutraceutical and other chemical industries. Membrane technologies, well-known for their several advantages (low environmental impact, no solvent utilization, high selectivity, etc.), can be used to recover different classes of phenolic compounds from pomace extract, according to their molecular weights. In food industries, crossflow filtration is generally performed using tubular mineral membranes under high crossflow velocities [4, 5]. However, immersed organic hollow-fiber membrane process could be interestingly used as an alternative separation technique for such application, notably due to the significant reduction of the energy consumption [6]. In this context, the aim of this work was to provide reliable information to develop a convenient immersed hollow-fiber membranes pilot for the isolation of polyphenols from grape pomace extracts. Therefore, lab-scale experiments were performed using a frontal filtration module in order to identify the main parameters governing the separation efficiency. Three factors known to impact membrane performances were considered and tested: (i) the membrane average pores diameter or molecular weight cut-off (0.1 μm 100 kDa 10 kDa polyethersulfone membrane), (ii) the physiochemical characteristics of pomace extracts (particles size distribution, turbidity, etc.) and (iii) the hydrodynamic conditions, namely shear stress. In order to identify the optimal operating conditions for the pilot-scale filtration, the performances of lab-scale filtration were particularly studied in terms of fouling mechanisms (productivity) and phenolic compounds separation (selectivity). conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585220/1/ID585220.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
topic Q02 - Traitement et conservation des produits alimentaires
Q04 - Composition des produits alimentaires
Q02 - Traitement et conservation des produits alimentaires
Q04 - Composition des produits alimentaires
spellingShingle Q02 - Traitement et conservation des produits alimentaires
Q04 - Composition des produits alimentaires
Q02 - Traitement et conservation des produits alimentaires
Q04 - Composition des produits alimentaires
Rouquie, Camille
Dahdouh, Layal
Delalonde, Michèle
Wisniewski, Christelle
Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study
description Grapes are the world's second largest produced fruit crop, with an annual production of 77 million tons in 2013 [1]. Among grapes processing industries, wineries induce approximately 10 million tons of byproducts per year, mostly pomace and lees [2]. Nowadays, the management and the valorization of food industry wastes constitute an economical, environmental and social challenge. It turns out that grape based products such as grape pomace contain a high amount of polyphenols, well known for their biological activities [3]. Thus, the extraction and purification of those high added value compounds from grape pomace are of great interest for cosmetic, nutraceutical and other chemical industries. Membrane technologies, well-known for their several advantages (low environmental impact, no solvent utilization, high selectivity, etc.), can be used to recover different classes of phenolic compounds from pomace extract, according to their molecular weights. In food industries, crossflow filtration is generally performed using tubular mineral membranes under high crossflow velocities [4, 5]. However, immersed organic hollow-fiber membrane process could be interestingly used as an alternative separation technique for such application, notably due to the significant reduction of the energy consumption [6]. In this context, the aim of this work was to provide reliable information to develop a convenient immersed hollow-fiber membranes pilot for the isolation of polyphenols from grape pomace extracts. Therefore, lab-scale experiments were performed using a frontal filtration module in order to identify the main parameters governing the separation efficiency. Three factors known to impact membrane performances were considered and tested: (i) the membrane average pores diameter or molecular weight cut-off (0.1 μm 100 kDa 10 kDa polyethersulfone membrane), (ii) the physiochemical characteristics of pomace extracts (particles size distribution, turbidity, etc.) and (iii) the hydrodynamic conditions, namely shear stress. In order to identify the optimal operating conditions for the pilot-scale filtration, the performances of lab-scale filtration were particularly studied in terms of fouling mechanisms (productivity) and phenolic compounds separation (selectivity).
format conference_item
topic_facet Q02 - Traitement et conservation des produits alimentaires
Q04 - Composition des produits alimentaires
author Rouquie, Camille
Dahdouh, Layal
Delalonde, Michèle
Wisniewski, Christelle
author_facet Rouquie, Camille
Dahdouh, Layal
Delalonde, Michèle
Wisniewski, Christelle
author_sort Rouquie, Camille
title Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study
title_short Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study
title_full Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study
title_fullStr Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: Preliminary evidence from lab-scale study
title_sort feasibility of immersed hollow fiber membranes for the isolation of phenolic compounds from grape pomace extracts: preliminary evidence from lab-scale study
publisher Formatex Research Center
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585220/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/585220/1/ID585220.pdf
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