Applied Sciences (Jun 2021)

Ultrasound-Assisted Extraction of Lavender (<i>Lavandula angustifolia</i> Miller, Cultivar Rosa) Solid By-Products Remaining after the Distillation of the Essential Oil

  • Federica Turrini,
  • Margherita Beruto,
  • Luciano Mela,
  • Paolo Curir,
  • Giorgia Triglia,
  • Raffaella Boggia,
  • Paola Zunin,
  • Fernando Monroy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11125495
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 5495

Abstract

Read online

FINNOVER is an EU Interreg-Alcotra project that aims to bring new perspectives to floriculture enterprises by recovering useful bioproducts from the waste produced during processing of several aromatic species. In this study, a new operation strategy to recover lavender (Lavandula angustifolia Mill.) solid by-products remaining after the extraction of the essential oil was developed. Pulsed ultrasound-assisted extraction was employed as a sustainable and eco-compatible technology to extract, in a very short time (10 min), this agricultural waste using a food-grade solvent (a mixture of ethanol/water). All the extracts obtained from both flower and leaf waste and flower-only residues, exhibit a promising total phenolic content (38–40 mg gallic acid/g of dry waste), radical scavenging activity (107–110 mg Trolox/g of dry waste) and total flavonoid content (0.11–0.13 mg quercetin/g of dry waste). Moreover, the chromatographic analysis of these extracts has shown that this overlooked agriculture waste can represent a valuable source of multifunctional compounds. Particularly, they exhibit a content of polyphenols and flavonoids up to 200 times higher than the corresponding leachate, and they are a valuable source of gentisic acid (1.4–13 mg/g dry waste) representing a new low-cost ingredient usable in different fields (i.e., cosmetic).

Keywords