Valorisation of agricultural waste with an adsorption/nanofiltration hybrid process: from materials to sustainable process designElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c7gc00912g

Downstream processing is considered to be the bottleneck in pharmaceutical manufacturing because its development has not kept pace with upstream production. In some cases, the lack of efficient downstream processing capacity can seriously affect both the sustainability and profitability of a pharmac...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Didaskalou, Christos, Buyuktiryaki, Sibel, Kecili, Rustem, Fonte, Claudio P, Szekely, Gyorgy
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 03.07.2017
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Summary:Downstream processing is considered to be the bottleneck in pharmaceutical manufacturing because its development has not kept pace with upstream production. In some cases, the lack of efficient downstream processing capacity can seriously affect both the sustainability and profitability of a pharmaceutical product and even result in its failure. Minimising solvent and raw material consumption, as well as utilising waste, can make a significant difference towards environmentally benign and economically viable chemical production. In this work, the authors present the development and modelling of a continuous adsorption process with in situ solvent recovery for the isolation of oleuropein from olive leaves, an agricultural waste. Waste utilisation in agriculture has gained increasing attention because this economic sector is ranked as the 2 nd highest global greenhouse gas emission contributor. Imprinted polymers were developed for the selective scavenging of oleuropein from olive leaf extracts using green solvents. The mild temperature-swing (25-43 °C) process allows the continuous isolation of oleuropein at 1.75 g product per kg of adsorbent per hour with an unprecedented 99.7% purity. In situ solvent recovery was realized with a solvent-resistant nanofiltration membrane allowing 97.5% solvent recycle and 44.5% total carbon footprint reduction, while concentrating both the product stream for crystallisation and the waste stream for disposal. A continuous oleuropein isolation process using imprinted materials coupled with nanofiltration-based solvent recovery utilising olive leaf waste.
Bibliography:10.1039/c7gc00912g
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI
ISSN:1463-9262
1463-9270
DOI:10.1039/c7gc00912g