Antioxidant and flexible bioplastics based on microwave-assisted extracted coffee fruit cascara pectic polysaccharides

Pectic polysaccharides with film-forming ability are often recovered from renewable agrifood by-products through solid-liquid extraction (SLE). Targeting an organic solvent-free approach, in this work, it is hypothesized that pectic polysaccharides of interest for bioplastics development can be recovered by microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) and purified by ultrafiltration. Coffee fruit cascara (CFC) was used as raw material. MAE of CFC-derived pectic polysaccharides was carried out at 120 °C at different times (2 min, 5 min, and 10 min). A 3-times (1 h each) sequential SLE with 2% acetic acid under reflux at atmospheric pressure was also performed. High molecular weight (HMW) extracts obtained by MAE for 2 min (HMW_MAE 2′) and by SLE for 1 h (HMW_SLE1), composed of 60 mol% and 54 mol% uronic acids with 18% and 17% methyl-esterification, and 7% and 8% acetylation, respectively, were selected for bioplastics development. HMW_MAE 2’ originated slightly transparent, dark brown, hydrophilic (ca. 32° water contact angle), and antioxidant (90% ABTS•+ inhibition after 5 min) bioplastics, similar to HMW_SLE1-derived materials, but 10-fold more stretchable (20% and 2% elongation at break, respectively). Therefore, MAE followed by ultrafiltration showed to be a fast and clean strategy to recover low methyl-esterified CFC pectic polysaccharides with the ability to develop antioxidant and flexible bioplastics.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Oliveira, Gonçalo, Petronilho, Sílvia, Kapusniak, Kamila, Kapusniak, Janusz, Castillo, M. Dolores del, Coimbra, Manuel A., Ferreira, Paula, Passos, Cláudia P., Gonçalves, Idalina
Other Authors: Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal)
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024
Subjects:Coffee by-product, Polysaccharides, Microwave-assisted extraction, Active films, Circular economy,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/364322
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Pectic polysaccharides with film-forming ability are often recovered from renewable agrifood by-products through solid-liquid extraction (SLE). Targeting an organic solvent-free approach, in this work, it is hypothesized that pectic polysaccharides of interest for bioplastics development can be recovered by microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) and purified by ultrafiltration. Coffee fruit cascara (CFC) was used as raw material. MAE of CFC-derived pectic polysaccharides was carried out at 120 °C at different times (2 min, 5 min, and 10 min). A 3-times (1 h each) sequential SLE with 2% acetic acid under reflux at atmospheric pressure was also performed. High molecular weight (HMW) extracts obtained by MAE for 2 min (HMW_MAE 2′) and by SLE for 1 h (HMW_SLE1), composed of 60 mol% and 54 mol% uronic acids with 18% and 17% methyl-esterification, and 7% and 8% acetylation, respectively, were selected for bioplastics development. HMW_MAE 2’ originated slightly transparent, dark brown, hydrophilic (ca. 32° water contact angle), and antioxidant (90% ABTS•+ inhibition after 5 min) bioplastics, similar to HMW_SLE1-derived materials, but 10-fold more stretchable (20% and 2% elongation at break, respectively). Therefore, MAE followed by ultrafiltration showed to be a fast and clean strategy to recover low methyl-esterified CFC pectic polysaccharides with the ability to develop antioxidant and flexible bioplastics.