Abstract
The green microalga Haematococcus pluvialis has been widely studied due to its capacity to accumulate great amounts of astaxanthin, a high-value carotenoid with biological activities. In the present work, two green compressed fluid–based processes, pressurized liquid extraction (PLE) and supercritical antisolvent fractionation (SAF), are integrated to obtain an astaxanthin-enriched extract from this microalga. PLE was carried out using pressurized ethanol as solvent, for 20 min, at 10 MPa, and 50 °C as extraction temperature. Subsequently, the obtained extract was processed by SAF to further purify the carotenoid fraction. The SAF process was optimized using a 3-level factorial experimental design and considering three experimental variables: (i) CO2 pressure (10–30 MPa), (ii) percentage of water in the PLE extract (20–50%), and (iii) PLE extract/supercritical-CO2 flow rate ratio (0.0125–0.05). Total carotenoid content was evaluated in both extracts and raffinates. Best results were obtained at 30 MPa, 0.05 feed/SC-CO2 mass flow rate, and 20% (v/v) of water in the feed solution, achieving values of 120.3 mg g−1 carotenoids in extract (in the SAF extract fraction), which were significantly higher than those obtained in the original PLE extract. In parallel, a new fast two-dimensional comprehensive liquid chromatography (LC×LC) method was optimized to get the full carotenoid profile of these extracts in less than 25 min. This is the first time that the use of a C30 column is reported in an on-line LC×LC system.
… Butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT), canthaxan- thin, and β-carotene (from Anacystis nidulans algae) were obtained from Sigma–Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). Lutein (from Echinacea purpurea) was purchased from Chengdu Biopurify Phytochemicals Ltd. (Chengdu, China) …