Abstract

The bio-based economy concept requires using biomass not only for energy production but also for bioactive compound extraction, application or biotransformation. This study analyzed the possibility of obtaining bioactive compounds from biomass before its transformation into biofuel. This involved an analysis of the total content of polyphenols (TPC), flavonoids (TFC), and spectral analysis using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (QATR- FTIR) as well as analysis of the antioxidant activity of extracts from selected perennial herbaceous crops cultivated on marginal lands in Poland. The extracts were obtained by supercritical carbon dioxide extraction (scCO2) or scCO2 with water as a cosolvent (scCO2/H2O) from biomass of the following plants: Helianthus salicifolius, Silphium perfoliatum, Helianthus tuberosus, Miscanthus × giganteus, Miscanthus sacchariflorus, Miscanthus sinensis and Spartina pectinata. The biomass was harvested twice during the growing period (June and October) and once after the end of the growing period (February). For most of the analyzed extracts obtained from biomass at the growing stage using scCO2 or scCO2/H2O, a higher TPC was noted than for samples of semi-wood or straw biomass obtained after the end of the growing period. Higher contents of polyphenolic compounds were recorded in extracts obtained using scCO2/H2O. A positive correlation between TPC and antioxidant activity was noted for the analyzed substrates. Flavonoid contents varied in the analyzed samples, and higher contents were generally obtained in scCO2 extracts from biomass harvested at the beginning of the growing period. A high diversity of extract compositions was confirmed by spectral analysis. The presented data can be used at the initial stage of planning a biorefinery.

Highlights

  • One of the most attractive renewable sources of energy is plant biomass, perennial plants that are not used in food production [1,2,3]

  • Phenolic compounds are essential for plant functions because they are involved in oxidative stress reactions, defensive systems, growth and development [28]

  • It has already been shown that raffinate obtained after extraction of polyphenols using scCO2 could be used as a stable and valuable substrate in a biorefinery or for energy production [22]

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most attractive renewable sources of energy is plant biomass, perennial plants that are not used in food production [1,2,3]. As the data show, the profitability of producing energy from plant biomass is not always satisfactory. Perennial plants, including perennial herbaceous crops, offer a wide variety of environmental benefits when compared with annual species. Due to economic reasons resulting from the single-purpose use of perennial plants as solid biofuel, they are currently mainly cultivated on an experimental scale The possibility of multidirectional use of these species as substrates for biogas plants, second-generation biofuels or bioproducts (with regard to the content of specific compounds) has been increasingly more frequently indicated

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