Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1188874 | Food Chemistry | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Oat bran concentrate (OBC) was defatted with supercritical carbon dioxide (SCD), then microwave-irradiated (MI) at 50, 100 or 150 °C for 10 min in water, 50% or 100% ethanol, and extract pH, soluble solids, phenolic content (PC) and antioxidant capacity (AC) were analysed. OBC was air-classified into five fractions and MI in water at 150 °C. OBC without SCD and microwave irradiation was extracted at 22 °C. Most effective temperature during microwave irradiation for maximising extraction of PC and AC was 150 °C. Defatted OBC in 50% ethanol and MI at 150 °C extracted greatest PC and AC. SCD treatment slightly reduced PC and AC. OBC extracted in water or 50% ethanol at 22 °C without microwave irradiation had similar PC and AC than OBC MI at 150 °C, but much higher levels were observed for latter heat treatment using absolute ethanol. Air-classification shows potential to enhance PC and AC.