Extraction of peppermint essential oils and lipophilic compounds: Assessment of process kinetics and environmental impacts with multiple techniques

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Abstract

Consumers are becoming more mindful of their well-being. Increasing awareness of the many beneficial properties of peppermint essential oil (EO) has significantly increased product sales in recent years. Hydrodistillation (HD), a proven conventional method, and a possible alternative in the form of microwave-assisted hydrodistillation (MWHD) have been used to isolate peppermint EO. Standard Soxhlet and alternatively supercritical fluid (SFE), microwave-assisted, and ultrasound-assisted extraction separated the lipid extracts. The distillations employed various power settings, and the EO yield varied from 0.15 to 0.80%. The estimated environmental impact in terms of electricity consumption and CO2 emissions suggested that MWHD is an energy efficient way to reduce CO2 emissions. Different extraction methods and solvent properties affected the lipid extract yield, which ranged from 2.55 to 5.36%. According to the corresponding values of statistical parameters, empiric mathematical models were successfully applied to model the kinetics of MWHD and SFE processes.

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APA

Radivojac, A., Bera, O., Zeković, Z., Teslić, N., Mrkonjić, Ž., Bursać Kovačević, D., … Pavlić, B. (2021). Extraction of peppermint essential oils and lipophilic compounds: Assessment of process kinetics and environmental impacts with multiple techniques. Molecules, 26(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26102879

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