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Alginate industrial waste streams as a promising source of value-added compounds valorization

Hylenne Bojorges, María José Fabra, Amparo López‐Rubio, Antonio Martínez‐Abad

2022The Science of The Total Environment39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The alginate industry processes more than hundred thousand tons per year of algae in Europe, discarding around 80% of the algae biomass as different solid/liquid residual streams. In this work, Saccharina latissima and Ascophyllum nodosum, their generated alginates and all residual fractions generated in the process were characterized in terms of lipid, ash, protein content, and the carbohydrate composition and antioxidant capacities analyzed. The first fraction after acid treatment (ca. 50% of the initial dry biomass) was rich in phlorotannins (15 mg GAE/g) and bioactive fucoidans (15-70%), with a high sulfation degree in A. nodosum. Two fractions generated from the solid residue, one soluble and another insoluble (Ra and Rb, respectively), constituted 9% and 5-8% of the initial biomass and showed great potential as a source of soluble protein (30% for S. latissima), and cellulose (70%) or fucoidan, respectively. Valorization strategies are suggested for these waste streams, evidencing their high potential as bioactive, texturizing or nutritional added-value ingredients for cosmetic, food, feed or pharmaceutical applications.

Topics & Concepts

AscophyllumFucoidanChemistryValorisationBiomass (ecology)AlgaeFood scienceRaw materialPulp and paper industryDry weightPolysaccharideBotanyBiologyWaste managementOrganic chemistryAgronomyEngineeringSeaweed-derived Bioactive CompoundsAlgal biology and biofuel productionMicrobial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology
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