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Título
Filtration of subcritical water hydrolysates from red macroalgae byproducts with ultraporous ceramic membranes for oligosaccharide and peptide fractionation
Publicado en
Journal of Membrane Science. 2022, V. 660, 120822
Editorial
Elsevier
Fecha de publicación
2022-10
ISSN
0376-7388
DOI
10.1016/j.memsci.2022.120822
Resumen
An ultrafiltration-based process for oligosaccharide and peptide fractionation from a macroalgae subcritical
water hydrolysate was studied. A wide range of separation results was obtained depending on the membrane
pore. 100 kDa cut-off size was enough for hydrolysate clarification with total retention of colloidal materials.
Oligosaccharides present in the hydrolysate showed the highest retention with all membranes, glucans mostly,
followed by galactans, and finally arabinans. Peptides obtained after subcritical water treatment were some of
the lowest rejected compounds, even using a 5 kDa membrane. The increase in temperature from 20 to 50 ◦C and
feed flow rate from 6.6 to 11.2 L/h enhanced permeate flux for 5 kDa membrane, without perturbing the
membrane retention. The Hermia’s models identified the cake layer resistance as the major fouling resistance in
hydrolysate filtrations at 20 ◦C, but standard pore blockage was the principal fouling mechanism at 50 ◦C. A
fractionation process with sequential filtration stages at 20 ◦C and TMP = 1.1 bar was examined. Oligosaccharides were fractionated in the retentates of the sequential filtrations with 100, 5 and 1 kDa membranes. The
final permeate collected from the 1 kDa membrane was freeze-dried to obtain a peptide-rich solid (71 wt%) that
could be used in different applications.
Palabras clave
Peptide purification
Oligosaccharide recovery
Membrane fouling
Macroalga byproducts
Biorefinery
Materia
Química orgánica
Chemistry, Organic
Ingeniería química
Chemical engineering
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
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