Abstract

Faster and more selective extraction methods are urged to recover food-grade pigments and antioxidants from microalgae – which do not resort to food-incompatible and environment-unfriendly solvents. Hence, this study ascertained the influence of pressure, temperature, CO2 flow rate and a polar co-solvent upon the yields of carotenoids and chlorophylls in supercritical fluid extraction of Scenedesmus obliquus biomass. The highest carotenoid yield was attained at 250bar and 60°C. The yields of chlorophylls, when using plain CO2, increased slightly with pressure, but decreased with temperature and CO2 flow rate; the highest yield of chlorophyll a was at 4.3gCO2min-1, whereas ethanol as co-solvent increased all yields except that of chlorophyll c. The highest ratio of total carotenoids to chlorophyll a was reached at 250bar and 60°C. A remarkable selectivity was observed under these operating conditions, which may enable easy separation and purification of the aforementioned pigments.

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