FIGUEIREDO, D. V. P.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4221351261346628; FIGUEIREDO, Douglas Vinicius Pinheiro de.
Résumé:
Broccoli (Brassica oleracea var. Itálica) is a vegetable grown in different parts of the world as
it is a food with recognized nutritional potential and rich in natural antioxidants. However, there
is an inappropriate destination for residues from broccoli processing, such as its leaves, as
several studies highlight that residue of natural food origin such as this, originating from
vegetables, contain a considerable amount of phytochemical compounds that can be extracted
and used as a source of compounds that can play an important nutritional enrichment role.
Therefore, it is interesting that an increasing number of solutions for using them are proposed.
Therefore, given this context, it is possible to identify an increase in research that seeks to
develop processes to enable the use of various products existing in agricultural waste in new
applications. An important step to enable this use is the extraction of these phytochemicals and
the subsequent drying of this extract, necessary to maintain the quality of the extracted material,
thus providing its potential industrial use. A process that has been researched is drying in a
fluid-dynamically active bed and the spouted bed appears to be equipment with a very high
potential to be applied in these drying processes. Therefore, the objective of this work was to
obtain the dry extract of broccoli leaves, with food potential, through the spouted bed drying
process. The experimental tests were carried out at the Agricultural Products Storage and
Processing Laboratory (LAPPA), Food Engineering Laboratory (LEA) and Biomass Chemistry
Laboratory (LQB), all at the Federal University of Campina Grande. A chemical and physical chemical characterization of the fresh broccoli leaf was carried out, after this process, a drying
kinetics of the broccoli leaves was carried out, as well as the application of 10 mathematical
models. In addition to calculating the main thermodynamic properties such as: effective
diffusivity, enthalpy, entropy and Gibbs free energy. Two extracts from broccoli leaf flour were
obtained, one hydroalcoholic and the other concentrated using a rotary evaporator. All these
processes were characterized physicochemically and bioactive compounds were determined,
such as: flavonoids, anthocyanins, phenolic compounds, tannins, carotenoids and total
chlorophylls. The concentrated extract was dried in a spouted bed with the variables
(maltodextrin concentration, drying air inlet temperature and feed flow) varying according to
an experimental design (DOE) 2³ + 3 experiments at the central point. After carrying out the
tests, the powders obtained were chemically and physicochemically characterized. It was
concluded that the drying kinetics of broccoli leaves in a convective dryer was successfully
conducted. The Midilli model was the one that best adjusted the drying kinetics. The average
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yield of powders from concentrated broccoli leaf extract after drying in a spouted bed was close
to 50%, the flavonoid content was on average 48,340mg/100g, making it possible to state that
broccoli leaf powder has properties antioxidants.