Abstract
Fructose and glucose are commonly present together in mixtures and may need to be separated. Current separation methods for these isomers are complex and costly. Nanofiltration is a cost-effective method that has been widely used for separating carbohydrates of different sizes; however, it is not commonly used for such similar molecules. Here, we report the separation of fructose and glucose in a nanofiltration system in the presence of fructooligosaccharides (FOS). Experiments were performed using a pilot-scale filtration setup using a spiral wound nanofiltration membrane with molecular weight cutoff of 1 kDa. We observed three important factors that affected the separation: (1) separation of monosaccharides only occurred in the presence of FOS and became more effective when FOS dominated the solution; (2) better separation was achieved when the monosaccharides were mainly fructose; and (3) the presence of salt improved the separation only moderately. The rejection ratio (Rf/Rg) in a fructose/glucose mixture is 0.92. We reported a rejection ratio of 0.69, which was observed in a mixture of 50 g/L FOS with a fructose to glucose ratio of 4.43. The separation is hypothesized to occur due to selective transport in the FOS layer, resulting in a preferential binding towards fructose.
Highlights
Fructose and glucose are sugar isomers with different properties
We study the separation of fructose and glucose using nanofiltration in the presence of FOS
We use this solution as a benchmark, because it gave a surprising selectivity between fructose and glucose during nanofiltration
Summary
Fructose and glucose are sugar isomers with different properties. Fructose is sweeter than glucose [1], less is needed for the same sweetness. Fructose follows a different metabolic path in humans that makes it less prone to cause diabetes [2]. Fructose consumption in our diet is preferred to glucose [3]. Fructose is commonly produced by enzymatic isomerization of glucose obtained from starch [4]. Fructose needs to be separated from the mixture, which still contains glucose
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