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Emerging macro- and micromolecules separation

  • Krishnamurthy Nagendra Prasad
  • , Hoe Boon Chin
  • , Ooi Chien Wei
  • , Giorgia Spigno
  • , Paula Jauregi
  • , N. N. Misra
  • , P. J. Cullen
  • World Pranic Healing Foundation India Research Centre
  • Chemical Engineering Discipline and Monash-Industry Palm Oil Education and Research Platform
  • University of Reading
  • Technological University Dublin
  • University of New South Wales

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Following their physical and chemical properties, macro- and micromolecules in biological substances are nowadays separated using conventional and emerging techniques. In the current chapter, emerging separation technologies such as colloidal gas aphrons (CGA), ultrasound-assisted crystallization, pressurized microwave extraction, and reverse micellar extraction (RME) are discussed in detail. CGA are surfactant-stabilized microbubbles that have been utilized for the selective separation of both macro- and micromolecules (i.e., proteins and polyphenols, respectively). Protein segregation has been conducted via ultrasound-assisted crystallization, too, a process considered in terms of nucleation and crystal growth. Besides, a typical extraction technique based on microwaves has recently been combined with pressure in order to separate and recover efficiently macromolecules (i.e., pectin) from food by-products. RME is a biphasic system that extracts biomolecules in the micelles, which are the nanometer-sized water droplets enclosed by surfactants and are dispersed in a bulk immiscible organic solvent.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationFood Waste Recovery: Processing Technologies, Industrial Techniques, and Applications
EditorsC.M. Galanakis
Pages195-217
Number of pages23
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Keywords

  • Colloidal gas aphrons
  • Ultrasound-assisted crystallization
  • Reverse micellar extraction
  • Pressurized microwave extraction

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