As known, tea contained abundant antioxidant compositions significant to human health due to major components of polyphenols and Flavonoids. Prior studies indicated that -OH substituent-rich aromatic compounds could might have electron shuttling capabilities for bioenergy recycling. Thus, it was suspected that antioxidant compositions would be crucial to bioelectrochemical characteristics to be expressed. Prior studies also revealed that decolorized intermediates evidently could enhance redox-mediating capabilities. Thus, it was suggested that such capabilities should be strongly associated to antioxidant and electron-transfer characteristics. For sustainable development, using naturally-present/generated and environmentally compatible plants as precursor(s) for further applications of recycling and reuses is more ecologically appropriate. Thus, this feasibility study tended to use myriads of fermented tea extracts for comparative study of bio-electrochemistry. Meanwhile, exploration of contents of antioxidants could provide further perspectives for applications in biofuel cells and functional foods. The findings also suggested that highly fermented tea extract would exhibit less electron-shuttling capabilities due to less content of polyphenolics remained in tea residues. In fact, this result was in parallel with the capabilities of antioxidants as revealed in literature. This findings could be used for diverse applications in bioenergy and biorefinery.
Published in | Science Discovery (Volume 5, Issue 3) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13 |
Page(s) | 174-178 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2017. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Antioxidant, Electrochemistry, Electronic Shuttle, Bioenergy, Biorefinery
[1] | B. Y. Chen, C. C. Hsueh, Deciphering Electron Shuttles for Bioremediation and Beyond. American Journal of Chemical Engineering, 4(5), 2016, pp.114-121. |
[2] | D. Zhao, N. P. Shah. Antiradical and tea polyphenol-stabilizing ability of functional fermented soymilk–tea beverage. Food Chemistry, 158(1), 2014, pp.262-269. |
[3] | G. Rusak, D. Komes, S. Likić, D. Horžić, M. Kovač. Phenolic content and antioxidative capacity of green and white tea extracts depending on extraction conditions and the solvent used. Food Chemistry, 110(4), 2008, pp.852-858. |
[4] | A. Masek, M. Zaborski,. E. Chrzescijanska,. Electrooxidation of flavonoids at platinum electrode studied by cyclic voltammetry. Food Chem, 127(2), 2011, pp.699-704. |
[5] | R. d. Q Ferreira, S. J Greco, M Delarmelina, K. C. Weber,. Electrochemical quantification of the structure/antioxidant activity relationship of flavonoids. Electrochimica Acta, 163, 2015, pp.161-166. |
[6] | O Makhotkina, P. A Kilmartin,. The use of cyclic voltammetry for wine analysis: determination of polyphenols and free sulfur dioxide. Anal Chim Acta, 668(2), 2010, pp.155-65. |
[7] | B. E Logan, J. M. Regan, “Electricity-producing bacterial communities in microbial fuel cells,” Trends in Microbiology, 14, 2006,. pp.512-518. |
[8] | Y Zuo, D. Xing, J. M Regan, B. E Logan,. Isolation of the Exoelectrogenic Bacterium Ochrobactrum anthropi YZ-1 by Using a U-Tube Microbial Fuel Cell. Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 74(10), 2008, pp.3130-3137. |
[9] | Y Sharma, B Li, “The variation of power generation with organic substrates in single-chamber microbial fuel cells (SCMFCs),” Bioresource Technology, 101, 2010, pp.1844-1850. |
[10] | E. Katz, I Willner, “Probing Biomolecular Interactions at Conductive and Semiconductive Surfaces by Impedance Spectroscopy: Routes to Impedimetric Immunosensors, DNA-Sensors, and Enzyme Biosensors,” Electroanalysis, 15, 2003, pp.913-947. |
[11] | K. F. Gracy, F. Oliveir, T. Tormin, M. F. Raquel Sous, Alberto de Oliveir, Sérgio A. L. de Morais, Eduardo M. Richter, Rodrigo A. A. Munoz. Batch-injection analysis with amperometric detection of the DPPH radical for evaluation of antioxidant capacity. Food Chemistry, 192(1), 2016, pp.691-697. |
[12] | R. Tabasco, F. Sánchez-Patán, M. Monagas, B. Bartolomé, B. V. Moreno-Arribas, C. Peláez, T. Requena. Effect of grape polyphenols on lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria growth: Resistance and metabolism. Food Microbiology, 2011, 28(7), pp.1345-1352. |
[13] | Y. Yilmaz , R. T. Toledo. Major Flavonoids in Grape Seeds and Skins: Antioxidant Capacity of Catechin, Epicatechin, and Gallic Acid. J. Agric. Food Chem., 2004, 52 (2), pp.255–260. |
[14] | Bor-Yann Chen, Hsuan-Liang Liu, Yun-Wen Chen, Yang-Chu Cheng. Dose–response assessment of metal toxicity upon indigenous Thiobacillus thiooxidans BC1, Process Biochemistry, 39(6), 2004, pp.737-748. |
[15] | B. Y. Chen, C. C. Hsueh, S. Q. Liu, J. Y. Hung, Y. Qiao, P. L. Yueh, Y. M. Wang. Unveiling characteristics of dye-bearing microbial fuel cells for energy and materials recycling: Redox mediators, International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, 38(35), 2013, pp.15598-15605. |
APA Style
An-Wei Hsu, Chung-Chuan Hsueh, Bor-Yann Chen. (2017). Feasibility Study on Applications of Fermented Tea Extracts for Bioenergy and Biorefinery. Science Discovery, 5(3), 174-178. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13
ACS Style
An-Wei Hsu; Chung-Chuan Hsueh; Bor-Yann Chen. Feasibility Study on Applications of Fermented Tea Extracts for Bioenergy and Biorefinery. Sci. Discov. 2017, 5(3), 174-178. doi: 10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13
AMA Style
An-Wei Hsu, Chung-Chuan Hsueh, Bor-Yann Chen. Feasibility Study on Applications of Fermented Tea Extracts for Bioenergy and Biorefinery. Sci Discov. 2017;5(3):174-178. doi: 10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13
@article{10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13, author = {An-Wei Hsu and Chung-Chuan Hsueh and Bor-Yann Chen}, title = {Feasibility Study on Applications of Fermented Tea Extracts for Bioenergy and Biorefinery}, journal = {Science Discovery}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {174-178}, doi = {10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.sd.20170503.13}, abstract = {As known, tea contained abundant antioxidant compositions significant to human health due to major components of polyphenols and Flavonoids. Prior studies indicated that -OH substituent-rich aromatic compounds could might have electron shuttling capabilities for bioenergy recycling. Thus, it was suspected that antioxidant compositions would be crucial to bioelectrochemical characteristics to be expressed. Prior studies also revealed that decolorized intermediates evidently could enhance redox-mediating capabilities. Thus, it was suggested that such capabilities should be strongly associated to antioxidant and electron-transfer characteristics. For sustainable development, using naturally-present/generated and environmentally compatible plants as precursor(s) for further applications of recycling and reuses is more ecologically appropriate. Thus, this feasibility study tended to use myriads of fermented tea extracts for comparative study of bio-electrochemistry. Meanwhile, exploration of contents of antioxidants could provide further perspectives for applications in biofuel cells and functional foods. The findings also suggested that highly fermented tea extract would exhibit less electron-shuttling capabilities due to less content of polyphenolics remained in tea residues. In fact, this result was in parallel with the capabilities of antioxidants as revealed in literature. This findings could be used for diverse applications in bioenergy and biorefinery.}, year = {2017} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Feasibility Study on Applications of Fermented Tea Extracts for Bioenergy and Biorefinery AU - An-Wei Hsu AU - Chung-Chuan Hsueh AU - Bor-Yann Chen Y1 - 2017/05/11 PY - 2017 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13 DO - 10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13 T2 - Science Discovery JF - Science Discovery JO - Science Discovery SP - 174 EP - 178 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2331-0650 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sd.20170503.13 AB - As known, tea contained abundant antioxidant compositions significant to human health due to major components of polyphenols and Flavonoids. Prior studies indicated that -OH substituent-rich aromatic compounds could might have electron shuttling capabilities for bioenergy recycling. Thus, it was suspected that antioxidant compositions would be crucial to bioelectrochemical characteristics to be expressed. Prior studies also revealed that decolorized intermediates evidently could enhance redox-mediating capabilities. Thus, it was suggested that such capabilities should be strongly associated to antioxidant and electron-transfer characteristics. For sustainable development, using naturally-present/generated and environmentally compatible plants as precursor(s) for further applications of recycling and reuses is more ecologically appropriate. Thus, this feasibility study tended to use myriads of fermented tea extracts for comparative study of bio-electrochemistry. Meanwhile, exploration of contents of antioxidants could provide further perspectives for applications in biofuel cells and functional foods. The findings also suggested that highly fermented tea extract would exhibit less electron-shuttling capabilities due to less content of polyphenolics remained in tea residues. In fact, this result was in parallel with the capabilities of antioxidants as revealed in literature. This findings could be used for diverse applications in bioenergy and biorefinery. VL - 5 IS - 3 ER -