Abstract

An ultrahigh-pressure supercritical fluid extraction method was optimized and applied to extract seed oil lipids from two moringa species, namely Moringa oleifera (MO) and Moringa peregrina (MP). A full-factorial design was used to investigate the direct and interaction influence of pressure and temperature in the range of 40 to 80 MPa and 40 to 70 °C, respectively, on the extracted amount of oil from crushed seeds. The results revealed that pressure has a significant positive influence on the extracted amount of oil. The best extraction condition using neat CO2 was found at 80 MPa and 57 °C, yielding 396 ± 23 and 529 ± 26 mg oil per gram of seeds for MO and MP, respectively. An extraction kinetics study revealed a mainly solubility-controlled extraction of oil, and 28 g of CO2 was required to extract 400 mg of oil per gram of seeds of MO using the developed method. Addition of ethanol to the sample prior to the extraction increased the proportion of extractable polar lipids as well as the total amount of extracted oil. The developed method increased the extracted amount of oil twofold compared to a reference method based on solvent sonication. The obtained oil consisted mainly of glycerolipids, sterol esters, and phospholipids. Phospholipids, campesterol, and stigmasterol ester concentrations were found to be higher in MO while cholesterol ester was more abundant in MP.

Highlights

  • Moringa plants belong to the family of the Moringaceae

  • The linearity of the predicted versus observed values plot underlined the validity of the model and its capability to predict the best condition of the extraction within the range of the design

  • An extraction method based on ultrahigh-pressure supercritical fluid extraction (UHPSFE) was developed to obtain oil from moringa seeds

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Summary

Introduction

Moringa plants belong to the family of the Moringaceae. The trees are widely distributed among tropical and sub-tropical countries. The moringa family includes 13 species, of which Moringa oleifera (MO) is the most widely cultivated species in Africa and India. It is known as the Bdrumstick^ or Bhorseradish^ tree. Moringa peregrina (MP), on the other hand, grows naturally, covering a wide range from the Dead. Yannick Nuapia Belo and Said Al-Hamimi contributed to this work.

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