Logo image
A Comparative Study on the Efficiency and Sustainability of Rice Bran Oil Extraction Methods
Journal article   Open access

A Comparative Study on the Efficiency and Sustainability of Rice Bran Oil Extraction Methods

L Sportiello, Maria Concetta Tenuta, R Tolve, F Favati and Giovanna Ferrentino
Foods, Vol.14(23), pp.1-16
14
2025
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10863/52296

Abstract

Life cycle assessment Green extraction By-products valorization Rice bran oil
Rice bran, a rice milling by-product, is a rich source of bioactives such as tocopherols and γ-oryzanol, with promising antioxidant properties. This study compared three extraction techniques—Soxhlet, maceration, and supercritical CO2 (SC-CO2)—to identify the method offering the best balance of rice bran oil (RBO) recovery, composition, and sustainability. Although all methods yielded similar oil quantities (~9.5–10.8%), SC-CO2 extraction achieved superior preservation of bioactives, with the highest tocopherol (116.9 µg/g) and γ-oryzanol (13.2 mg/g) levels. Antioxidant capacity, assessed via FRAP, ABTS, and DPPH assays, was consistently higher in SC-CO2-extracted oil. The fatty acid profile further confirmed the advantages of SC-CO2 extraction, with the oil showing a high proportion of unsaturated fatty acids (86.3%) and low saturated content (13.6%). In contrast, Soxhlet- and maceration-extracted oils contained higher saturated fractions (56.5% and 60.1%, respectively) and lower unsaturated content, reflecting the impact of thermal and solvent exposure on the lipid composition. Environmental impacts were quantified through cradle-to-gate life cycle assessment (LCA), showing that SC-CO2 extraction led to the lowest ecological burden due to its solvent-free process and lower energy demand. Normalizing impacts on both oil yield and bioactive content further highlighted its advantages. These findings place SC-CO2 extraction as a green, efficient alternative for valorizing rice bran, yielding a high-quality, antioxidant-rich oil suitable for food and cosmetic applications. The integrated chemical and environmental evaluation underscores the potential for a sustainable bioeconomy, effectively turning agricultural residue into functional ingredients.
pdf
Sportielloetal.,2025966.01 kBDownloadView
Open Access
url
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods14234076View

Details

Metrics

1 Record Views
Logo image