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Mechanism of Isoflavone Adsorption from Okara Extracts onto Food-Grade Resins

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journal contribution
posted on 2014-10-01, 00:00 authored by David Méndez Sevillano, Lena Jankowiak, Thomas L. T. van Gaalen, Luuk A. M. van der Wielen, Nasim Hooshyar, Atze-Jan van der Goot, Marcel Ottens
Okara is a byproduct of the soy milk industry containing valuable phytochemicals, called isoflavones, among other components (i.e., proteins, sugars, fibers, etc.). As a waste product, okara is an interesting source material for obtaining valuable chemicals, and knowledge of the behavior of such components in their complex matrix is a key step for design of a purification process. Six commercially available macroporous polymeric resins are investigated to measure and model the equilibrium properties of the adsorption of isoflavones, proteins, and total solids onto these resins. A new model is evaluated in which adsorption of isoflavones onto a protein layer is proposed describing the system isoflavones–resin XAD 4 better than a linear isotherm model. Parameters for both the linear model and the bilayer model are regressed and reported with their accuracy and correlated to the hydrophobicity of each of the isoflavones.

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