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Sonication and grinding pre-treatments on <Emphasis Type="Italic">Gelidium amansii</Emphasis> seaweed for the extraction and characterization of Agarose
Authors:Kit Wayne Chew  Pau Loke Show  Yee Jiun Yap  Joon Ching Juan  Siew Moi Phang  Tau Chuan Ling  Jo-Shu Chang
Institution:1.Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Engineering,University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus,Jalan Broga, Semenyih,Malaysia;2.Bioseparation Research Group, Faculty of Engineering,University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus,Jalan Broga, Semenyih,Malaysia;3.Department of Applied Mathematics, Faculty of Engineering,University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus,Jalan Broga, Semenyih,Malaysia;4.Nanotechnology & Catalysis Research Centre (NANOCAT), Institute of Postgraduate Studies,University of Malaya,Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia;5.Institute of Ocean and Earth Sciences,University of Malaya,Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia;6.Institute of Biological Sciences,University of Malaya,Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia;7.Department of Chemical Engineering,National Cheng Kung University,Tainan,China
Abstract:
Various pretreatments methods including sonication and grinding were performed on red seaweed Gelidium amansii for the subsequent extraction of agarose. The agarose products are usually extracted from agar powder products from seaweeds. In this study, the agarose was extracted using a direct polyethylene glycol (PEG) method without the need to first process the agar from seaweed. The agar extract was frozen then thawed and mixed directly with PEG solution to precipitate the agarose. The quality of agarose obtained was evaluated through physico-chemical properties analysis which includes spectral technique (FTIR), melting and boiling point, gel strength and sulfate content. These properties were compared with a non-pretreated sample and it was found that the addition of pretreatment steps improved the quality of agarose but gave a slightly lower yield. The gel strength of pretreated samples was much higher and the sulfate content was lower compared to non-pretreated samples. The best pretreatment method was sonication which gave gel strength of 742 g cm-2 and sulfate content of 0.63%. The extraction of agarose can be further improved with the use of different neutralizing agents. Pretreating the seaweed shows potential in improving the quality of agarose from seaweed and can be applied for future extraction of the agarose.
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