| Literature DB >> 30955668 |
Agnese Taticchi1, Roberto Selvaggini1, Sonia Esposto1, Beatrice Sordini1, Gianluca Veneziani2, Maurizio Servili1.
Abstract
Ultrasound-assisted extraction is an innovative technique applied to the extraction process for virgin olive oil (VOO), which is generally employed to increase plant efficiency and improve product quality. A high-power ultrasound (US) device was introduced at an industrial plant that can process at 2 tons/h to evaluate the technique's physicochemical impact on quality parameters of VOO that was caused by an intensive mass transfer induced by acoustic cavitation process and shockwaves. The impact on oil yield was also evaluated with respect to the ripening stage and malaxation time. No significant effects on the legal and commercial parameters of VOO (including quality indices, sterols, triterpene dialcohols, waxes and diacylglycerols) were found for olives at medium-early ripening stage. Significant physical changes, increased extraction yield (22.7%), enhanced phenol content (10.1%) were observed in US-VOO compared to control (C) oil extracted with a traditional process at an early maturity index.Entities:
Keywords: Fruit ripening; Malaxation time; Phenols; Physicochemical composition; Ultrasound; VOO quality; Volatile compounds
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30955668 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2019.03.041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514