Food waste valorization advocating Circular Bioeconomy - A critical review of potentialities and perspectives of spent coffee grounds biorefinery

Food waste valorization advocating Circular Bioeconomy - A critical review of potentialities and perspectives of spent coffee grounds biorefinery

Accepted Manuscript Food Waste valorization advocating Circular Bioeconomy -A critical review of potentialities and perspectives of Spent Coffee Groun...

2MB Sizes 0 Downloads 87 Views

Accepted Manuscript Food Waste valorization advocating Circular Bioeconomy -A critical review of potentialities and perspectives of Spent Coffee Grounds Biorefinery

Anastasia Zabaniotou, Paraskevi Kamaterou PII:

S0959-6526(18)33633-3

DOI:

10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.11.230

Reference:

JCLP 14989

To appear in:

Journal of Cleaner Production

Received Date:

13 July 2018

Accepted Date:

23 November 2018

Please cite this article as: Anastasia Zabaniotou, Paraskevi Kamaterou, Food Waste valorization advocating Circular Bioeconomy -A critical review of potentialities and perspectives of Spent Coffee Grounds Biorefinery, Journal of Cleaner Production (2018), doi: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.11.230

This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1

Food Waste valorization advocating Circular Bioeconomy -A critical

2

review of potentialities and perspectives of Spent Coffee Grounds

3

Biorefinery

4 5

Anastasia Zabaniotou*, Paraskevi Kamaterou

6

Biomass Group, Department of Chemical Engineering, Aristotle University of

7

Thessaloniki, Greece

8 9

Abstract. Waste biorefineries are instrumental for advocating Circular Bioeconomy. Food

10

waste valorization is a goal of sustainable development, gaining high interest in resolving

11

environmental and resources challenges. Coffee use generates massive quantities of spent

12

coffee grounds (SCG), a resource rich in fatty acids, amino acids, polyphenols, minerals, and

13

polysaccharides. This review aims to shed light on the potentialities, prospects, and challenges

14

of the transition from a mono-process to a cascade SCG biorefinery, in a circular economy

15

thinking. It was found that mono-process approaches of SCG extraction have been investigated

16

by many researchers, while SGC biorefining approaches are still at an early stage of research.

17

Studies on SCG biorefineries, their environmental and economic assessment are few in the

18

literature, therefore imitations in extrapolating information and comparing the results were

19

faced. It was made evident that more studies are needed on the economic assessment of the

20

mono-process SCG break down, at higher Technology Reediness Level (TRL) for realistic

21

assessments. Efficient conversion of SCG in a cascade biorefinery depends on the spectrum of

22

various end-products and cost-effective processing schemes. Lipids and/or polysaccharides

23

extraction followed by the conversion of by-streams to energy and biochar, in a closing loop

1

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

24

concept, has good potentialities. The review allowed the exploration of knowledge-based

25

strategies to unlock the potential of SCG for bio-derived chemicals, carbon materials, fuels and

26

fertilizer production and probably impacting waste management regulations. Some guidelines

27

for the sustainable design of SCG biorefineries were provided.

28 29

Keywords: Spent coffee ground, food waste, cascade biorefinery, sustainability, circular

30

economy, bioeconomy.

31 32

Corresponding author. Anastasia Zabaniotou, prof, email: [email protected]

33

Address: Dept of Chemical Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, U.Box 455, GR24154

34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49

2

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

50 51

Graphical Abstract

52 53

SCGs Cascade Biorefinery

Products

Syngas st

1 Refining

2nd Refining Biooil

Collection Biochar

Phenols Tannins Polysacharrides

54 55 56 57 58

Highlights

59 60



Food waste valorization advocates Circular Bioeconomy.

61



SCG valorization via one-process extraction has been widely investigated.

62



SCG biorefinery is still at an early stage of development.

63



A sequential SCG valorization is preferable for higher recovery.

64



SCG cascade biorefinery needs proofs of economic viability.

65



R&D work at higher Technology Reediness Level is needed 3

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Abbreviations ABTS

2,2'-azino-bis (3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid)

ACs

Activated carbons

AO7

Acid orange 7

BSG

Brewer's spent grains

CGA

Chlorogenic Acid

CM

Coffee melanoidins

CS

Coffee silverskin

db

Dry base

DSCG

Dried spent coffee grounds

EAE

Enzyme-assisted extraction

FFA

Free fatty acid

FW

Food Waste

HHV

Higher heating value

GAE

Gallic acid equivalents

HTL

Hydrothermal liquefaction

MAE

Microwave assisted extraction

MB

Methylene blue

PEF

Pulsed-electric field extraction

PEI

Potential environmental impact

Ph

Phenol

PHAs

Polyhydroxyalkanoates

PLE

Pressurized liquid extraction

PMHS

Polymethylhydrosiloxane 4

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

66

SCG-GAC

Spent coffee grounds into calcium-alginate beads

67

SCGs

Spent coffee grounds

SDGs

Sustainable Development Goals

SFE

Supercritical fluid extraction

SL

Solid-liquid

TBAs

Tannin-based absorbents

TE

Trolox equivalents

TS

Total solid

UAE

Ultrasound-assisted extraction

UNDP

United Nation Development Program

USDA

United States Department of Agriculture

VOCs

Volatiles Organic Compounds

EMY

effective mass yield

FC

Feature Complexity index

68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107

5

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

108

1. Introduction

109 110

Beyond climate change, the main challenges the world is facing today, are the substantial

111

increase in energy demand, food and material unsustainable consumption and production, and

112

anthropogenic wastes generation (Venkata et al., 2016). According to World Resources

113

Institution (World Resources Institute, 2018a), the planet is projected to hold 9.6 billion people

114

by 2050, consuming the equivalent of 1.6 planet’s resources, with a consequent high amount of

115

wastes generated. Consequences of the unsustainable consumption and production patterns are

116

resource depletion, climate change, air and water pollution, loss of biodiversity and of fertile

117

soil, amongst other environmental, social, and economic challenges (FAO, 2013).

118

The production of the enormous quantities of food waste (FW) is becoming a global

119

concern (Dahiya et al., 2016), because the world need to adequately feed the 9.6 billion people

120

by 2050, in a way that advances economic development and reduces pressure on the

121

environment (World Resources Institute, 2018a). Long-term strategies are needed aligning

122

short and medium-term goals. The long-term goal for many countries and especially for Europe,

123

is ensuring a transition from carbon-intensive to low-carbon societies. This transition must be

124

achieved by developing and deploying not only technologies and practices, but also changing

125

behaviors and patterns of production and consumption (World Resources Institute, 2018b), as

126

depicted in the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of United Nation development

127

program (UNDP). New interconnected areas, such as climate change, innovation, sustainable

128

consumption, are included among other in the SDGs (United Nations Development Program,

129

2018).

130

A new approach to sustainability has been proposed in Europe. This encompasses the

131

Circular Economy model, as a pathway to engage with challenges of sustainable production

132

and consumption. A priority in the EU is to stimulate the transition towards a Circular Economy 6

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

133

that fosters the promotion of sustainable and resource-efficient policies for long-term socio-

134

economic and environmental benefits, by adopting strategies of “closing the loop” in industrial

135

production systems (Maina et al., 2017). One of the most relevant goals in the application of

136

this approach is to convert low-value side streams/residues/wastes into more valuable products.

137

Limitations of this approach related to the social aspects of circularity, result to the call for more

138

ethical and socially inclusive approaches to the Circular Economy (Lazell et al., 2018).

139

Food waste (FW) valorization is a goal of sustainable development and it gains high

140

interest since many bio-based products can derived from them, besides energy and fuels (Rama

141

Mohan, 2016). Coffee is one of the most popular and appreciated beverages worldwide, and

142

plays an important role in the global economy, as it is the second most traded commodity after

143

oil (Murthy and Naidu, 2012). Coffee industries are a key sector in the global economy, due to

144

income reporting and job creation. Based on United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)

145

report (USDA, 2017), global coffee industry reached an estimated production of 9.34 million

146

tons in 2016/17, which generated massive quantities of bio-wastes that are incinerated, dumped

147

in a landfill, or composted. Coffee companies produce annually more than 2 billion tons of by-

148

products, such as coffee spent grounds (SCG) and coffee silverskin (CS), most of which are

149

thrown away for landfilling (Jimenez-Zamora et al., 2015).

150

The generation of energy and various commodities in an integrated approach addressing

151

sustainability, is a challenge and a perspective for Europe (Dahiya et al., 2016). New

152

generations of biorefinery can combine innovative bio-waste resources from different origins.

153

Integrated and cascade biorefineries are cornerstones of the Circular Bioeconomy. SCG can be

154

used as feedstock to produce various bio-based products and bioenergy in a biorefinery concept

155

(Mata et al., 2018), by closing loops (Karmee Sanjib Kumar, 2018). Targeting economic

156

viability and sustainability is very important for a Circular Bioeconomy (Vânia et al., 2018).

7

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

157

This paper aims to review the potentialities and perspectives of SCG biorefinery, as a

158

solution to current bio-waste disposal problems, in a Circular Bioeconomy. The objective is to

159

review the mono-process pathways for the valorization of SCG, reported in the international

160

literature, and to ding in the multi-process-multi-product cascade biorefinery concept that is a

161

cornerstone in the transition to Circular Bioeconomy. It finally aims to provide general

162

guidelines on how to build a sustainable SCG biorefinery, by summarizing various researcher’s

163

suggestions, who have worked on the topic of sustainable biorefineries.

164 165

2. Methodology

166 167

In this paper, a systematic literature review was performed following the method

168

proposed by Thürer et al. (2018), for sourcing, screening, and analyzing the published articles.

169

The target was to retrieve and select those articles which investigate and define the current state-

170

of-the-art on valorization of spent coffee grounds (SCG), via sustainable pathways in the

171

concept of biorefinery. Main effort was devoted to find studies on biorefineries’ economic

172

viability and sustainability. Since the strategy of Circular Economy is recent and mainly

173

articulated in Europe, very few studies appeared in the international literature, mainly published

174

during 2018.

175 176

2.1. Sourcing, screening, analyzing the articles

177 178

Scopus and open access are the bibliographic database selected for retrieving the articles,

179

because it provides extensive literature tools (books, articles). For quality assurance of the

180

research, only peer-reviewed articles were selected. The criteria used for the articles’ selection

8

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

181

were the title, abstract, keywords, and document type (restricted to ‘articles’ and ‘reviews’),

182

and the year of publication for a period of 9 years (from 2009 to 2018). The inquiry took place

183

in July 2018 using the terms ‘Spent AND Coffee AND Grounds AND Conversion’; ‘Spent

184

AND Coffee AND Grounds AND Extraction’; ‘Spent AND Coffee AND Grounds AND

185

Valorization’; ‘Spent AND Coffee AND Grounds AND Pyrolysis’; ‘Spent AND Coffee AND

186

Grounds AND Biorefinery’; ‘Spent AND Coffee AND Grounds AND Sustainable’; ‘Spent

187

AND Coffee AND Grounds AND economic’. Other articles, concerning biorefining and

188

Circular Economy were also included.

189

The literature inquiry brought to light 844 articles (109 for the search term ‘Spent AND

190

Coffee AND Grounds AND Conversion’, 252 for the search term ‘Spent AND Coffee AND

191

Grounds AND Extraction’, 119 for ‘Spent AND Coffee AND Grounds AND Valorization’, 98

192

from ‘Spent AND Coffee AND Grounds AND Pyrolysis’, 33 for ‘Spent AND Coffee AND

193

Grounds AND Biorefinery’, 201 for ‘Spent AND Coffee AND Grounds AND Sustainable’,

194

while only 3 dealing with economics. Nine review studies were retrieved, which published just

195

recently.

196

The original sample contained 470 duplicates articles, which were removed. From the

197

374 remaining articles, 39 were subtracted as unrelated and 13 were cut-off due to their year of

198

publication, which was out of the time spectrum set in this study. All 320 papers were examined.

199

By focusing on extracting, grouping of papers concerning sustainable SCG valorization that

200

give information, knowledge, and data, to reply to the research questions set, finally 92 papers

201

were used as the most appropriate and interesting for the review. Another 7 internet sources and

202

2 books on SGC valorization, and one book on food wastes, sustainability and Circular

203

Economy topics were also included. A total of 102 sources were selected for this review (Table

204

1).

9

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

205

The screening of the 320 papers was made by prioritizing papers discussing

206

sustainability, techno economic assessment, biorefinery approach, mono-process approach of

207

the SCG and related review papers published within the decade 2017-2018. The research questions for the screening of the 320 papers were:

208 209



Which is SCG’s composition?

210



Which useful components could be extracted from SCG and how?

211



What about thermochemical conversion routes for SCG valorization?

212



Can SCG produce biochar via pyrolysis?

213



Can biorefining be applied for SCG valorization?

214



How sustainable is to valorize SCG by biorefinery?

215



What is the economic viability of a SCG biorefinery?

216



What is the environmental sustainability of the SCG biorefinery?

217



Are there any guidelines for a multi process-multi product approach of SCG valorization?

218



Which are the prospects arising from this paper?

219

Fig. 1 depicts the number of the related papers published per year. Fig. 2 depicts the

220

paper related to the extracted product per year of publication. It is obvious that papers on mono-

221

process approach are the first appeared in the international literature and continue to be

222

published in a large number. Papers on biorefinery approach are recent and mainly of the year

223

2018. Papers on sustainability and technoeconomic assessment are few. Concerning review

224

papers, these are showing an increasing trend the last 3 years.

225 226

3. Materials and methods

227

10

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

The first research question for the screening of the 320 papers is related to SCG’s

228 229

composition. The SCG composition defines the choices for the valorization.

230 231

3.1. SCG composition

232 233

The biochemical composition of SCG as reported in literature, is presented in Table 2.

234

SCG contain 9-16 wt% db lipids, 5-15 wt% db proteins and are considered as an important

235

source of polysaccharides (carbohydrate whose molecules consist of several sugar molecules

236

bonded together). Literature review revealed that almost half of the material (45.3 wt% db) is

237

sugars polymerized into cellulose and hemicellulose structures (Mussato et al., 2011) and that

238

most polysaccharides (around 70 wt% db of total polysaccharides from roasted coffee) remains

239

in SCG (Arya & Rao, 2007). Mussato et al. (2012) have hydrolyzed SCG and efficiently

240

fermented it to ethanol by yeast. SCGs coffee fibers exhibit antioxidant properties suggesting

241

its use as potential dietary supplement (Campos-Vega et al., 2015). Ballesteros et al. (2015)

242

investigated the antimicrobial and antioxidant capacities of polysaccharides extracted from

243

SCG.

244

The ultimate/proximate analysis of reported SCG is presented in Table 3. The carbon

245

content of SCG ranges between 45-53 wt% whereas the values for hydrogen and nitrogen

246

content are 6-7 wt% and 2-4 wt%. The amounts of ash (1-2 wt% db) containing in SCG is low

247

compared to other biomass sources (Zabaniotou et al., 2017). SCG is characterized by high total

248

volatiles content (Tsai et al., 2012).

249 250

3.2. Mono-process approach: What can be extracted from SCG?

251

11

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

252

SCG represent a resource rich in valuable components which could be valorized giving

253

a range of commodities. Large amounts of organic compounds are contained in SCG, such as

254

fatty acids, amino acids, polyphenols, minerals, and polysaccharides (Campos-Vega et al.,

255

2015). Coffee is considered an important source of polysaccharides (Ballesteros et al., 2017),

256

proteins (Mussato et al., 2011) and lipids (Campos-Vega et al., 2015). SCG is rich in sugars (45

257

ww%, dry weight of the material) which can be polymerized into cellulose and hemicellulose

258

structures. Mannans is the major polysaccharides of SCG which contains 47 wt% db mannose,

259

30 wt% db galactose, 19 wt% db % glucose, and 4 wt% db arabinose (Mussatto et al., 2011).

260

Remarkable amount of proteins (13-17 wt% db) are contained in SCG Mussato et al. (2011).

261

Other N-containing substances like caffeine, trigonelline, free amines and amino acids are

262

contained in SCG (Delgado et al., 2008).

263

Caffeine is a non-protein nitrogenous compound which can be recovered from SCG.

264

Panusa et al. (2013) estimated a low content of caffeine (0.96-0.97 mg/g dry sample) in SCG

265

extracts. According to Cruz et al. (2012) the range of caffeine content found higher for the

266

espresso coffee (1.9 -7.9 mg/g (DW)). However, caffeine, tannins and chlorogenic acid are of

267

eco-toxicological concern and can limit their value-adding applications.

268

There is an especial interest in SCG lipids extraction. Total lipids content of espresso

269

coffee residues ranges from 9.3-16.2 wt% db (Cruz et al., 2012) depending on the coffee variety

270

(Jenkins et al., 2014), a promising feedstock to produce biodiesel (Al-Hamamre et al., 2012).

271

Hexane is the most popular solvent for oil extraction, but Supercritical Fluid Extraction is a

272

modern environmentally friendly technology which is increasingly being used for SCG oil

273

extraction (Campos-Vega et al., 2015).

274

SCG contain phenolic compounds which are known as human health related compounds,

275

with demonstrated antioxidant, anti-bacterial, antiviral, anti-inflammatory and anti-

12

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

276

carcinogenic activities (de Souza et al., 2004). Polyphenols and chlorogenic acid (CGA) have

277

been extracted from SCG via a conventional solid-liquid method (Campos-Vega et al., 2015). The techniques for extraction of compounds are classified into two categories: the

278 279

conventional and the non-conventional (Azmir et al., 2013). The conventional techniques are:

280



Soxhlet extraction

281



Maceration

282



Hydrodistillation

283

The non-conventional extraction techniques are (Azmir et al., 2013):

284



Ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE)

285



Pulsed-electric field extraction (PEF)

286



Enzyme-assisted extraction (EAE)

287



Microwave assisted extraction (MAE)

288



Pressurized liquid extraction (PLE)

289



Supercritical fluid extraction (SFE)

290

Table 4 presents the valuable components that can be extracted from SCG, as

291

demonstrated in the literature. By searching the literature, opportunities were found concerning

292

the recovery of oils, polysaccharides, phenolic compounds, tannins that can be used in various

293

commodities, by using mono-extraction processes, as depicted in Fig. 3.

294 295

3.2.1. Oil recovery

296

The oil content of SCG ranges from 10 to 15 wt%, depending on the coffee varieties

297

(Jenkins et al., 2014). Somnuk et al. (2017) studied the effect of four different solvents (hexane,

298

ethanol, hydrous ethanol and methanol) on coffee oil yield, by using a circulation process. The

299

optimal conditions (30.4 min extraction time and 22.5 g/g ratio of DSCG-to-hexane) resulted

13

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

300

in approximately 11.8 wt% oil yield. Phimsen et al. (2016) utilized a Soxhlet extractor and n-

301

hexane as a solvent in order to extract the oil from dried SCGs. The extracted oil, yielded from

302

10 to 13 wt% db SCG, and then it was hydrotreated in a shaking batch reactor, by using NiMo/γ-

303

Al2O3 and Pd/C as catalysts. It has proved the bio-hydrotreated fuel production and potentiality

304

to be used as a renewable energy.

305 306

3.2.2. Polysaccharides recovery

307

Polysaccharides play multiple role in life process and present an immense potential in

308

healthcare, food, and cosmetic industries, due to their content of bioactivities that have

309

therapeutic effects and relatively low toxicity (Shi L. 2016). Due to their enormous structural

310

heterogeneity, the approaches for isolation and purification of polysaccharides are distinct from

311

that of the other macromolecules such as proteins etc. (Shi L. 2016). Therefore, various methods

312

widely used in isolation and purification of polysaccharides. The extraction of polysaccharides

313

from SCG has been studied, mainly using chemicals as extraction agents. Sodium hydroxide

314

(Ballesteros et al., 2015) and potassium hydroxide have been employed in SCG alkali

315

treatments, while sulfuric acid has been used to recover carbohydrates from SCG dilute acid

316

hydrolysis (Mussatto et al., 2011).

317

Mayanga-Torres et al. (2017) proposed the recovery of sugars compounds from coffee

318

industry residues using subcritical water hydrolysis as the valorization technique. Evaluation of

319

optimal conditions which simultaneously maximize holocellulose hydrolysis and minimize

320

both sugar degradation and dilution is proposed.

321

The extraction of polysaccharides by autohydrolysis of SCG was investigated by

322

Ballesteros et al. (2017). The extracted polysaccharides (29.29 wt%) characterized by high

323

antioxidant activity. The conditions for the extraction were 15ml water/g SCG, for 10 min, at

14

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

324

160°C. The polysaccharides obtained were thermostable in a large range of temperature and

325

had typical carbohydrate pattern. Their use for industrial applications, mainly in the food area

326

was proposed.

327

The feasibility of microwave superheated water extraction of polysaccharides from SCG

328

was studied by Passos et al. (2013). They found that a maximum of 0.57 g/batch

329

polysaccharides for 1 g SCG: 10 mL water can be recovered. Further extraction of

330

polysaccharides was achieved with a second extraction (re-extraction) of the remaining un-

331

extracted insoluble material, under the same conditions.

332 333

3.2.3. Phenolic compounds recovery

334

Polyphenols are micronutrients. The health benefits of polyphenols and their protective

335

effects in food systems as antioxidant compounds, are well known and have been extensively

336

investigated (Shavandi et al., 2018). Recovery of relevant natural antioxidants for use as

337

nutritional supplements, foods, or cosmetic additives can be achieved by SCG extraction with

338

environmentally friendly procedures (Panusa et al., 2013).

339

The bibliographic search shown that various extraction methods were used. Subcritical

340

water extraction of SCG resulted in significant antioxidative phenolics production (Xu et al.,

341

2015) at temperature range of 160-180°C, time range of 38-55 min and solid-to-liquid ratio of

342

14.1 g/l. 86.2 mg GAE/g of total phenolic compounds were recovered. Shang et al. (2017)

343

optimized the SCG extraction conditions for total phenolics by using pressurized liquid

344

extraction (PLE) method with water and ethanol. Optimal conditions obtained at 195°C

345

extraction temperature. The total phenolics content ranged from 19 to 26 mgGAE/gDW.

346

Al-Dhabi et al. (2017) developed and validated the SCG ultrasound-assisted solid-liquid

347

extraction of phenolic compounds Ultrasonic power, temperature, time, and solid-liquid (SL)

15

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

348

ratio were studied as parameters. The optimum process conditions were: 244 W of ultrasonic

349

power, 40 °C of temperature, 34 min of time and 1:17 g/ml of SL ratio and the extraction

350

obtained yields reached 33.84 GAE/g of total phenolic content.

351

Coffee cherry pulp is a by-product derived from the process of coffee production. Coffee

352

cherry pulp contains considerable amounts of phenolic compounds and caffeine. An attempt to

353

produce “Cascara”, a refreshing beverage, has been made by Heeger et al. (2017). Six dried

354

coffee pulp samples and Cascara produced out of one of those samples, were investigated in

355

Switzerland. Aqueous extraction of coffee pulps revealed a content of total polyphenols

356

between 4.9 and 9.2 mg gallic acid equivalents (GAE)/g db. The antioxidant capacity was

357

between 51 and 92 lmol Trolox equivalents (TE)/g DM, as measured with ABTS radical.

358

Bourbon variety from Congo and Maragogype variety showed highest caffeine contents, 6.5

359

and 6.8 mg/g DM, respectively. In all samples, chlorogenic acid, protocatechuic acid, gallic

360

acid and rutin, were present. The beverage Cascara contained 226 mg/L of caffeine and 283 mg

361

GAE/l of total polyphenols and an antioxidant capacity of 8.9 mmol TE/l.

362

Jimenez-Zamora et al. (2015) showed the prebiotic, antimicrobial and antioxidant

363

capacity of SCGs and CS, as well as those melanoidins (a coffee component generated during

364

the roasting process), obtained from the former. The prebiotic activity was important in both

365

CSG and CS, although the presence of coffee melanoidins (CM) interfered with such beneficial

366

properties. On the contrary, CM exerted an intense antimicrobial activity that could be used to

367

avoid the growth of pathogenic bacteria in food products. CSG, CS and CM were highly

368

antioxidant. The addition of sugar during coffee roasting, namely torrefaction, increased the

369

antioxidant and antimicrobial activity due to a larger generation of CM, although prebiotic

370

activity was not affected.

371

16

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

372

3.2.4. Tannins recovery

373

Tannins extensively assessed as natural alternatives to in-feed antibiotics (Huang et al.,

374

2017). Low et al. (2015) investigated the influence of extraction parameters in SCG tannins’

375

recovery. They found that sodium hydroxide concentration, extraction temperature and liquid

376

to solid ratio considerably effected the SCG tannin extraction yield and its reactivity. Extraction

377

time had only marginal effect in the tannin extraction process. The optimal extraction conditions

378

were found: 5 wt% sodium hydroxide concentration, 100 °C extraction temperature, 30 min

379

extraction time, and 8.2 liquid to solid ratio. These conditions resulted in a high tannin

380

extraction yield (21.02 wt%) and high reactivity.

381

Tannins have traditionally been regarded as “anti-nutritional factor” for poultry. Recent

382

researches have mentioned that when applied in appropriate manner, improved intestinal

383

microbial ecosystem, enhanced gut health and hence increased productive performance (Huang

384

et al., 2017). However, tannins if used as additives in poultry feed to control diseases and to

385

improve animal performance, must ensure a consistent quality (Redondo et al., 2014).

386

Tannins are also low-cost natural biopolymers and excellent candidates to produce bio-

387

sorbents. Low-cost and eco-friendly products, such as adhesive, plastic, polyform can be

388

produced by using the SCG extracted tannins. Tannin-added films can be used as green,

389

nontoxic packaging materials for food and pharmaceutical products (Missio et al., 2018).

390

Tannin-based absorbents (TBAs) have a natural affinity to absorb heavy metals dyes, and

391

pharmaceutical compounds from contaminated waters (Bacelo et al., 2016).

392 393

3.2.5. Caffeine recovery

17

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

394

Brazinha et al., (2015) optimized the process of producing a natural extract from SCG

395

by using membrane technology, with no organic solvents or adsorbents involved. The extracted

396

product was enriched in caffeine with specific health benefits.

397

Shang et al. (2017) optimized the SCG extraction conditions to caffeine using pressurized

398

liquid extraction (PLE) method with water and ethanol. At the optimal conditions (195°C

399

extraction temperature) caffeine’s yield reached 9 mg/g db.

400 401

3.3.

SCG valorization for bioenergy and carbon materials production

402 403

Energy recovery from biomass is a way to reduce waste, produce fuels, protect the

404

environment and mitigate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (Limousy et al, (2017). Energy

405

recovery should be combined with material recovery for enhanced resources efficiency in the

406

concept of a Circular Economy.

407

Energy recovery from SCG was documented in the international literature. Biochemical

408

(transesterification) and thermochemical (pyrolysis, gasification, hydrothermal liquefaction,

409

combustion), enzymatic conversion technologies were used for this, as it is depicted in Fig. 4.

410

Biodiesel, biooil, CHP, heat, biochar, activated carbons, carbon nanotutes, are the main

411

products of the application of a mono-thermochemical process fueled with SCG (Limousy et

412

al., 2017).

413 414

3.3.1. Biodiesel production

415

SCG contain significant amounts of lipids (∼16%w/w), which could potentially be

416

utilized as feedstock in biodiesel production. Many researchers used transferification of the

417

exctracted oil (Loyao et al. (2018). Solvent extraction technologies, with a wide range of

18

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

418

solvents for lipid extraction from SCG, were used to determine the effect of solvent selection

419

and process temperature on the extraction efficiency and composition of the obtained oil, by

420

Efthymiopoulos et al. (2018). Al-Hamamre et al. (2012) studied oil extraction from dried spent

421

coffee grounds (DSCGs) for biodiesel production. They obtained 60 g DSCG. Kondamudi et

422

al. (2008) extracted the SCG oil (10-15 %wt) using solvents such as hexane, ether, and

423

dichloromethane under reflux conditions. They transesterified the oil to produce biodiesel and

424

achieved 100% conversion. The produced biodiesel was found to be stable for more than 1

425

month under ambient conditions.

426

The valorization route of lipid recovery followed by transesterification for biodiesel

427

production was also studied by Go and Yeom (2017). Lipid extraction was estimated at 92.7%,

428

using 13.7 mL-hexane/g-WCG, within 30 min extraction time, and 25°C. NaOH was used as

429

an alkaline catalyst. Optimum conditions for transesterification were achieved with the addition

430

of 0.5% catalyst, 1.5 mL methanol/g-lipid, at 45°C, and 9 h of reaction time. Biodiesel

431

production was mainly influenced by reaction time and temperature. Caetano et al. (2013)

432

examined the potential of biodiesel production from SCG. They used various solvents and

433

proposed a two-step process of acid esterification followed by alkaline transesterification for

434

lipids with high free fatty acids, as the best route to biodiesel. However, the properties of the

435

derived biodiesel (iodine number, acid value, and ester content) did not comply with the NP

436

EN 14214:2009 standards (Caetano et al., 2013). For meeting standard requirements, they

437

proceeded with two remediation procedures: a) blending of SCGs lipids with other higher-

438

quality vegetable oils before transesterification, b) mixing the produced biodiesel with higher-

439

quality biodiesel.

440

Döhlerta et al. (2015) studied the catalytic conversion of triglycerides derived from SCGs

441

to produce diesel, by using a cheap reductant agent, the polymethylhydrosiloxane (PMHS)

19

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

442

under mild reaction conditions. Significant amounts of PMHS-waste generated as by-products

443

of the process (∼1.7% of the PMHS is required for the oil reduction). They were depolymerized

444

in a subsequent step, resulting in PMHS-waste conversion to methyltrifluorosilane and

445

difluoromethylsilane, which can be useful for new silicones production as building blocks. The

446

acid catalytic solvo-thermal in situ transesterification of SCG was demonstrated by Park et al.,

447

(2018). They suggested themeth for boosting the economic feasibility of biodiesel production

448

from wet SCGs.

449

Kookos (2018), by performing an economic and environmental analysis of biodiesel

450

production from SCG, concluded that the process economics can be attractive only in the case

451

of a centralized large-scale production plant. Biodiesel production from SCG is not

452

economically sound for small scale units.

453 454

3.3.2. Biooil production

455

Fast pyrolysis can convert the SCG into biooil and biochar. The fast pyrolysis of SCG

456

targeting biooil production was studied by Kelkar et al. (2015). The experiments took place in

457

a compact, transportable, screw conveyor reactor. Biooil yields showed a maximum yield of

458

61.8 ww% at 500 °C, while the highest biochar yield was observed at the lowest pyrolysis

459

temperature (429 °C). SCG-biooil contained fatty acids, fatty acid esters, medium-chain

460

paraffins, olefins, and caffeine.

461

Fast pyrolysis of SCG was also studied by Bok et al. (2012). They produced biooil with

462

a maximum yield of 55 ww% at 550 °C pyrolysis temperature, pyrolysed in a fluidized bed

463

reactor. Li et al. (2014) investigated SCG bioenergy production potential using pyrolysis, at

464

two different heating rates (10 and 60 °C/min). Biogas contained mainly CO2, CO, CH4 and the

20

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

465

gaseous volatile. An efficiency of 77–85% was achieved in relation to the feedstock moisture

466

content.

467

SCG pyrolysis was performed by Cho et al. (2016) targeting both, waste disposal and

468

biooil recovery. In their study, SCG were pretreated with FeCl3, and carbon dioxide to enhance

469

syngas generation and reduce condensable hydrocarbons, such as tar. Syngas enhancement was

470

achieved via the CO2-induced thermal cracking of VOCs, due to the reaction between CO2 and

471

VOCs. Tar reduction was achieved by using Fe as catalyst in a CO generation from Fe-SCG

472

pyrolysis. This has also resulted in CO2 dramatical increase (up to 8000%), compared to SCG

473

pyrolysis withN2.

474

Hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) of SCG in hot-compressed water was applied to

475

produce crude bio-oil in a 100 cm3 stainless-steel autoclave reactor, with N2 atmosphere, (Yang

476

et al., 2016). The effects of operating parameters (retention times - 5 min, 10 min, 15 min, 20

477

min and 25 min, reaction temperatures -200 °C, 225 °C, 250 °C, 275 °C and 300 °C,

478

water/feedstock mass ratios -5:1, 10:1, 15:1 and 20:1, process gas initial pressure -2.0 MPa and

479

0.5 MPa), were investigated targeting biooil yield with designed properties. A yield of 47.3ww

480

% of the crude biooil was achieved at 275 °C liquefaction temperature, 10 min retention time,

481

water/feedstock mass ratio of 20:1 and initial pressure of 2.0 MPa. The higher heating value

482

(HHV) of crude biooil was estimated at 31.0 MJ kg−1.

483

Yang et al. (2017) investigated the co-liquefaction in subcritical water of SCG mixed

484

with paper filter, corn stalk and white pine bark, aiming to bio-crude oil production. The

485

optimum reaction temperature was estimated at 250 °C, and the mixing biomass ratio was 1:1.

486

The best feedstock combination was SCG and CS and addition of 5% NaOH, as a catalyst.

487

Biooil quality and high yield suggest SCG as a valuable biooil feedstock.

488

21

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

489

3.3.3. Biochar production

490

Slow pyrolysis of SCG can produce biochar. Pyrolytic char from SCG is a much better

491

fertilizer compared to direct SCG use in the fields, as it was proved by various studies. SCG

492

and SCG-char were applied as biochar, by Kim et al., (2014). In the case of SCG application,

493

the soil phytotoxicity increased, because a massive amount of dissolved carbon amount was

494

released from SCG in the soil. In contrast, SCG-char application did not exhibit this

495

phenomenon because any easily released organic matter was removed previously in the

496

pyrolysis process.

497

Tsai et al. (2012) evaluated SCG as a potential feedstock for the production of biochar

498

via pyrolysis. The conditions used were: Tpyrolysis= 400-700°C, heating rate=10 °C/min. It was

499

reported that the produced biochars showed high carbon content (>80 ww%), fixed carbon (>60

500

ww%) and calorific value (>30 .1 MJ/kg). The produced char can be also used also as solid fuel

501

in the industrial sector due to high calorific value.

502

Researchers (Cho et al., 2017) investigated co-pyrolysis of paper mill sludge mixed with

503

SCG, focusing on biochar production. CO2 was used as reaction medium aiming to syngas

504

generation enhancement and biochar’s physico-chemical properties modification. The

505

synergistic effects of CO2 and Fe/Ca caused a decrease in pyrolytic oil. The presence of Fe/Ca

506

in PMS favored CO generation Fe-ions were converted into magnetite (Fe3O4) and porous

507

biochar was created. Cho et al. (2017) concluded that co-pyrolysis of paper mill sludge and

508

SCG, using CO2 as reaction medium could feasibly generate CO and biochar, suitable for

509

environmental applications.

510 511

3.3.4. Activated carbon production

22

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

512

Jung et al. (2016) prepared activated carbons from SCG into calcium-alginate beads

513

(SCG-GAC). The activated carbon powder originated from SCG was used for the removal of

514

acid orange 7 (AO7) and methylene blue (MB), from aqueous media. PH played a highly

515

important role in dye adsorption, whereas the influence of ionic effects was essentially neutral.

516

The pore diffusion model describing the adsorption kinetics, revealed that the rate-limiting step

517

during the adsorption process was pore diffusion. The maximum SCG-GAC adsorption

518

capacity for AO7 at pH=3.0 was estimated at 665.9, for MB 986.8 mg/g absorption obtained,

519

at 30 °C and pH= 11.0.

520

Different impregnation ratios of KOH were utilized by Laksaci et al. (2017) for the

521

synthesis of new activated carbons (ACs), from SCG. Many functional groups were identified

522

on the ACs surface. BET measurement revealed a maximal specific surface area of 1778 m2 g-

523

1,

524

methylene blue (MB) molecules was tested.

for an impregnation ratio of 36 mmol of KOH/g. ACs removal efficiency of phenol (Ph) and

525 526

3.3.5. Nanocarbons production

527

Zein et al. (2017) studied the SCG microwave radiation to produce nanocarbons. They

528

found that the optimum condition for maximizing nanocarbons yield (60 ww%) obtained at 200

529

°C, 650W microwave power and 45 min residence time. They concluded that this method could

530

potentially produce spherical shaped nanocarbons, which could be utilized for future scientific

531

innovations.

532 533

3.3.6. Liquid polyols production

534

Soares et al. (2014) investigated the possibility of SCG conversion into liquid polyols,

535

using acid liquefaction at moderate temperature and autogenous pressure. They concluded that

23

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

536

the produced polyols have characteristics similar to those of petroleum-based polyols, which

537

are used in the polyurethane foam industry.

538 539

3.3.7. Energy production

540

The possibility of using SCG for energy via combustion, was proposed by Ciesielczuk et

541

al. (2015). They used briquettes made of mixed beech shavings and SCG, for increasing the

542

calorific value. SCG tested as a new bulking agent for biodrying of dewatered sludge (DS). It

543

was proved that SCG is an excellent bulking agent that accelerates DS biodrying and produces

544

a solid fuel with a high calorific value (Hao et al., 2018).

545 546

3.3.8. Cogeneration of heat and power (CHP)

547

Food manufacturers have been piling into the bioenergy sector turning waste and

548

production by-products into energy, producing enough heat and power for their own needs,

549

with surplus energy feeding back to the grid. Combined heat and power (CHP) can be produced

550

by SCG gasification. Cutting-edge, innovative and economical gasification techniques with

551

high efficiencies are a prerequisite for the application of gasification. Feedstock types, the

552

impact of different operating parameters, tar formation and cracking, and modelling approaches

553

for biomass gasification of biomass have widely studied.

554

Steam gasification of SCG was investigated by Pacioni et al. (2016) in the temperature

555

range of 650 to 850 °C, with a steam partial pressure range of 0.05 to 0.3 bar. A magnetic

556

suspension thermobalance was used for the gasification tests which were performed

557

isothermally. Gas chromatograph equipped with TCD/FID detectors was used for gaseous

558

products analysis. Product characterization revealed that the products contained higher carbon

559

and lower volatile matter compared to the original SCG and had high calorific value.

24

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

560

Temperature and steam partial pressure influenced syngas production. H2+CO yields were

561

higher for a conversion range of 50–80%. The H2/CO ratio showed an increasing trend with

562

temperature.

563

To improve the feasibility and sustainability of SCG gasification, technological

564

advancement and the minimization of socio-environmental effects are needed (Ingrao et al.,

565

2018a).

566 567

3.4.

Biorefinery approach

568 569

The European Commission has set a long-term goal to develop a competitive, resource

570

efficient and low carbon economy by 2050 (EC, 2011). Bioeconomy is expected to play an

571

important role in the low carbon economy. The European strategy for building a sustainable

572

bio-based economy with emphasis on the sustainable use of natural resources, competitiveness,

573

socioeconomic and environmental issues, is on the spot (Scarlat et al., 2015).

574

Strategies relying on complete biomass disintegration through combustion, gasification,

575

or fermentation only, do not lead to optimal utilization of biomass feedstock. Cascading

576

approaches are required to maximize biomass valorization (Ingrao et al., 2018a, 2018b;

577

Zabaniotou et al., 2017, 2018).

578

In the waste-biorefinery concept, multifunctional processes are integrated in an optimized

579

sequence to utilize waste, with an objective of maximizing the productivity of marketable

580

intermediates and products (chemicals, materials, and bioenergy/biofuels), to enhance of the

581

process economics .

582

By searching carefully the international literature, 6 studies and 2 review papers were

583

found, dedicated to explore the various SCG biorefineries at laboratory scale, which signifies a

25

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

584

low Technology Readiness Level (TRL). All 8 papers were published during the last two years

585

(2016-2018). The two review papers published on 2018, summarise various SCG biorefineries.

586

(Kourmentza et al., 2018; Mata et al., 2018). While the authors of the first review support the

587

SCG biorefinery approach, the authors of the second review conclude that most of the studied

588

biorefineries have limited scope and low economic value (Mata et al., 2018).

589

The reported SCG biorefineries (2015-2018) integrate various number of processes and

590

products as shown in Table 5, Fig.5. When compared with the mono process/extraction

591

proposals, it is clear that the biorefinery allows a more complete utilization of SCG, by

592

obtaining high value products, using technologies and process already available at commercial

593

scale. For applications in a Circular Bioeconomy, the biorefinery approach is a corne stone

594

(Karmee Sanjib Kumar, 2018).

595

Mata et al. (2018) in their review paper described several proposals for a SCG bio-

596

refinery, and compared each other. They concluded that for obtaining a wider product portfolio,

597

several separation processes are required and a combination of biological and chemical

598

processes is necessary. They also concluded that the most of them have limited scope and the

599

final products have low economic value.

600 601

4. Discussion on SCG biorefinery approach

602 603

The valorization of SCG by a mono-process pathway has attracted a lot of attention

604

recently from both the academia and industry. However, very few studies dealt with the

605

economic viability assessment of a mono-process approach of SCG valorization.

606

Food wastes create huge environmental, economic, and social problems, being also sources

607

of added-value materials. Coffee industries are a key sector in the global economy due to

26

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

608

income reporting and job creation. Coffee companies produce annually more than 2 billion tons

609

of by-products such as coffee spent grounds (SCG) and coffee silverskin (CS). Proper design

610

of a biorefinery system, aiming to a wide range of products generation could serve as a unique

611

sustainable solution to SCG wastes management and valorization in a Circular Economy.

612

Techno-economic analysis and optimization models are crucial to design process scale,

613

understand how major cost categories affect the process and assess their sustainability. It is

614

evident that new business models introducing high-value bioproducts to biorefineries are

615

essential for achieving economic viability of industries within Bioeconomy. Economically

616

feasible production of conventional bioenergy such as biofuels, biopower and bioheat, is a

617

challenge. Biorefineries must compete with the inexpensive fossil fuel energies.

618 619

4.1 Prospects of SCG biorefinery

620 621

Besides, contributing to more sustainable and circular economies, the biorefinery has

622

high commercial value when compared to the ones obtained by currently used waste treatment

623

methods. The major advantage of biorefineries is their suitability for maximizing valorization

624

of structural and energetic potentials lying in biomass (Budzianowski Wojciech, 2017).

625

The prospects of SCG biorefinery, as explored at laboratory level and reported in the

626

international literature, are very encouraging. SCG can feed a biorefenery and via advanced

627

chemical and biotechnological methods, can produce a large number of value-added products

628

(polyhydroxyalkanoates, biosorbent, activated carbon, polyol, polyurethane foam, carotenoid,

629

phenolic antioxidants, green composite) and bioenergy (biodiesel, bio-oil, biogas), due to their

630

rich composition in lipid, carbohydrates, carbonaceous, and nitrogen containing compounds

27

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

631

among others. However, exploration at a high Technology Readiness Level (TRL), is still

632

lacking behind.

633 634

4.2 Economic viability and sustainability challenges

635 636

The economic viability is a decisive parameter for the biorefinery deployment. This was

637

made obvious in a study performed by Kookos I.K. (2018), who recommended that research on

638

SCG valorization should be oriented towards the efficient recovery of the bioactive compounds

639

for a more economically attractive conversion. The economic performance of the biodiesel

640

production via a mono-process pathway is only viable at large production capacities, realized

641

at centralized facilities, despite that the environmental assessment of the process showed that

642

biodiesel production has good environmental indicators.

643

Results from a recent study on the techno-economic analysis of food waste biorefineries

644

at European level, showed that the most profitable options are those related to economies of

645

scale. However, the risk of increasing externalities due to logistics is possible (Cristóbal et al.,

646

2018).

647

There is a shortage in studies of a cascade SCG biorefinery. Garcia et al. (2017) reported

648

that hydrogen production via SCG gasification biorefinery is viable, but without referring to

649

the production of high-value bioproducts. Mussatto et al. (2013) have suggested the integrated

650

biorefinery of the Brazilian case of spent grains (BSG) for the production of xylitol, lactic acid,

651

activated carbon and phenolic acids integrated with heat production, as viable pathway, because

652

the economic viability and environmental performance that achieved have shown positive

653

indicators. The obtained economic margin was evaluated at 62.25%, the potential

28

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

654

environmental impact was 0.012 PEI/kg products, and the carbon footprint of the processing

655

stage represented 0.96 kg CO2-e/kg of BSG.

656

Apart from the economic viability, the environmental sustainability of the SCG

657

biorefinery is a request (Ingrao et al., 2018a, 2018b). The challenge is to produce value added

658

products by integrating different strategies that lead to an interconnected environmental

659

biorefinery for maintaining the ecological footprint. However, sustainable biorefinery systems

660

are still a challenge, since weak designs lead to not viable solutions, with almost similar

661

environmental burdens with the petrochemical systems. They face socio-economic issues

662

related to land use, labor, food security and others, sdditionaly (Moncada et al., 2016).

663

In the economic analysis, results must be evaluated taking into account the high

664

uncertainty that this kind of study entails, which include the cost estimation and process

665

parameters estimation for low TRL technologies (Cristóbal et al., 2018).

666 667

4.3 Business development and market perspectives

668 669

It was made obvious that there is a need for design procedures of economically feasible

670

sustainable biorefineries that could meet technical and market requirements and improve

671

cascading biomass utilization, (Budzianowski Wojciech, 2017). Methodologies for biorefineriy

672

conceptual design and optimization are needed. Approaches need to consider raw materials,

673

technologies, processing routes, products, and technical, economic, and environmental aspects.

674

Processes must be optimized for the specific feedstock used (due to variations on feedstock

675

composition, cost and logistics of process efficiencies and economics), coupled with energy

676

generated from its residue (Mata et al. (2018).

29

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

677

The screening of sustainable SCG biorefinery pathways for the production of bio-based

678

products and energy is a complex challenge. Critical tools for predicting the commercialization

679

feasibility of biorefining pathway include laboratory and pilot-scale experimental results,

680

processes modeling, technoeconomic and market analysis. More R&D is needed at higher

681

Technology Reediness level (TRL). Economic and environmental assessment for the practical

682

implementation of a SCG biorefinery at industrial scale is also needed (Zabaniotou et al., 2017).

683

High-value, low-volume bioproducts coupled to bioenergies, with a potential to improve

684

economic viability of biorefineries and biomass resource utilization, are urgently required

685

(Budzianowski Wojciech M., 2017).

686

It is difficult to assess which biorefinery will have a market perspective because detailed

687

economic analysis should be conducted for each. It is suggested that integrated and holistic

688

approaches for bio-waste utilization, as industrial feedstocks, will boost the transition towards

689

the bioeconomy era, the establishment of which would expand and diversify the market outlets

690

of bio-based products (Maina et al., 2017). SCG biorefineries, as many food waste-based

691

biorefineries should be tailored to the local and regional context, and to be profitable and

692

sustainable in the long term.

693

The scale should be analyzed in every biorefinery, during the preliminary design stages.

694

Different factors define the minimal scale for biorefinery’s feasibility. The number and quantity

695

of high added value products usually is associated with low scales (Kachrimanidou et al. 2013).

696 697

4.4

Policy and regulations

698 699

Policy analysis is a new dimension to the sustainability assessment of food waste

700

reduction and valorization. Regulatory framework and policy actions undertaken by local and

30

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

701

global actors are the drivers of change in food-waste reduction and valorization. Today, very

702

different national policies apply to bio-waste management, ranging from small action in some

703

Member States, to ambitious policies, in others. This can lead to increased environmental

704

impacts and can delay the full utilization of advanced bio-waste management methods, while

705

action on national level and community is needed. The lack of a standard universal definition

706

of food waste has impact on the efficient use of by-products for technological and commercial

707

exploitation (Morone et al., 2017).

708

Mathematical mapping methods to assess food consumption impacts and protocols,

709

based on laboratory investigation and demonstration, will formulate pathways for the

710

sustainable valorization of CSG and food waste in general (Morone et al., 2017; Galanakis,

711

2017).

712 713

4.5

Indexes

714 715

A number of indexes related to economy and environmental impacts have estimated by

716

Salazar, 2013. Indexes as a new basic concept need to be applied for understanding the

717

biorefinery efficiency (Moncadam et al., 2016).

718

The effective mass yield (EMY) and the Feature Complexity index (FC) are indexes that

719

have been used in other waste-biorefineries (Zabaniotou et al., 2018). The effective mass yield

720

(EMY) is defined as the percentage of the mass of the desired products relative to the mass of

721

used as feedstock. The Feature Complexity (FC) of the biorefinery has to do with the number

722

of different features: it is increasing by the number of features, by the state of technology of a

723

single feature; it is decreasing with the maturity of the technology (high TRL). This means that

724

a high Technology Readiness Level (TRL) of a feature has lower technical and economic risks

31

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

725

and a lower complexity. This led to the calculation procedure of the Biorefinery Complexity

726

Index that the complexity is directly linked to the number of features and the Technology

727

Readiness Level (TRL) of each single feature involved by the IEA Bioenergy Task 42 ‘Bio

728

refining’ (Jungmeier, 2009).

729

The Feature Complexities (FC) are rating from 1-9 according to the TRL of the process

730

(1-9); TRL1:basic (FC9), TRL2:applied research (FC8), TRL3: critical function or proof of

731

concept established (FC7) , TRL4: lab testing/validation of prototype (FC6), TRL5: prototype

732

system verified (FC5), TRL6: integrated pilot system demonstrate(FC4), TRL7:system

733

incorporated in commercial design (FC3), TRL8: system incorporated in commercial design

734

(FC2), TRL9: system proven and ready for full commercial deployment (FC1) (Jungmeier,

735

2009).

736 737

4.6 Circular Economy

738 739

Food waste prevention is an integral part of the new Circular Economy Package, with

740

benefits such as boost of the global competitiveness, sustainable growth and, generationof new

741

jobs. One of the issues of the Circular Economy model is the collection of SCG and the scale

742

of the endeavor.

743

The circularity of a coffee micro-economy naturally brings up questions related to

744

scalability. The collection of coffee grounds requires storage space, proximity among

745

participating buyers, proximity to additional production facilities in which spent grounds will

746

be used, and numerous other logistical concerns.

747

Due to their high organic matter, SCG sometimes are used as a fertilizer. However, SCG

748

are highly toxic to the plants due to the presence of caffeine, tannins, and polyphenols. In

32

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

749

addition, due to the presence of organic matter in SCG, a huge quantity of oxygen is required

750

for their degradation in landfills. Simultaneously, methane, which is a greenhouse gas and even

751

more harmful than carbon dioxide, is also released in the landfills, contributing to global

752

warming. Therefore, usual disposal methods need to be replaced by more sustainable towards

753

increased resources recovery and higher energy efficiency. Valorization of this waste towards

754

material and energy recovery rather than disposal, is gaining interest.

755

Although, the biorefinery concept is considered as one of the research cornerstones in

756

the last years and as the best option to transform the different waste systems by a multi-process,

757

multi-product pathways, (Moncada et al., 2016), there is a shortage of analysis of the potential

758

benefits on associated business development.

759

Only one paper found in the book of Morone et al., (2017), to assess the logistics,

760

economical and social feasibility to isolate SCG from the catering industry and use them as raw

761

material for a novel process to produce alternative high added value products in a near-perfect

762

circular economy cycle, making use of reverse logistics and generating near-zero waste (Topi

763

and Bilinska, 2017). The study was based on a series of theoretical scenarios corresponding to

764

the different possible logistic and process options that stakeholders could identify. This

765

theoretical approach concluded that the process is technically feasible with available technology

766

within current infrastructure and modest investments and the economic case is very attractive

767

to investors.

768

Some international companies of coffee beverage have started to devote efforts on

769

sustainable valorization of SCG, advocating Circular Economy model, by organizing collection

770

systems and exploring technological pathways for valorization (Bernstein, 2012).

771

Alternative scenarios for using the SCG to produce alternative high added value products

772

should be considered and developed, by using the participatory mapping approach and

33

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

773

economic, environmental and social benefits compared with compost production scenarios

774

(Morone et al, 2018).

775 776

4.7

Design guidelines

777 778

Reflections and guidelines for sustainable biorefinery concepts are cited, that are mainly

779

proposed by Moncada et al., 2016. These include the following quotes that could be also

780

suggested for a SCG biorefinery design

781



Integration increases the efficiency.

782



Integrated technologies should have priority over separated technologies.

783



Integration of cogeneration CHP using biorefinery solid residues is suggested.

784



Energy integrations levels are important to reach maximum energy efficiency levels.

785



Include as many as possible products in the biorefinery.

786



Cascade approaches are sustainable pathways in the circular economy.

787



Innovative engineering solutions should be preferred.

788



The CHP gasification technology has a better performance than the technology based on direct combustion.

789 790



technical, and economic impacts is very important.

791 792

The use of modern tools and strategies of analysis and evaluation for environmental,



The implementation of optimization strategies and models could be interesting when coupling with further design.

793 794



Supply chain and logistics are essential part of a green biorefinery.

795



Use of indexes is important.

34

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

796

In addition to the above, conducting sensitivity analyses for comparison of different

797

systems, enables global evaluation and rating of those systems on the same scale of normalized

798

values. LCA can be used as a valid tool to support designers, decision-makers towards

799

promotion of more sustainable options of SCG valorization for energy, fuel, biochar and high

800

added value/ low volume products (Ingrao et al., 2018b), although weighing is based often upon

801

social or political considerations (De Benedetto and Klemes, 2009). Therefore, weighing step

802

could be recognized as mandatory by the subject International Standards (Ingrao et al.,2018b,

803

2018a).

804 805

5.

Conclusions

806 807

This study was conducted to review the field of SCG valorization, its prospects,

808

potentialities and challenges. The review attained the proposed goal, as it brought important

809

issues of the SCG mono- and biorefinery valorization options, as reported in the international

810

literature. Limitations were found in extrapolating information and results from the papers

811

reviewed, since each paper explored different end-products and processes, so evaluations and

812

comparisons were difficult to be made.

813

The review allowed the authors to deepen the knowledge in the SCG biorefinery, that

814

represents the platform to start the development at higher TRL, for further integration and

815

optimization of SCG recycling systems. It allowed the development of knowledge-based

816

strategies to unlock the potential of SCG to produce bio-derived chemicals, fuels and carbon

817

materials, and probably effecting waste management regulations.

818

The review focus was centered upon SCG, which an important food waste of global

819

society, containing substances that make it a valuable bio-resource. Today, food wastes are a

35

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

820

major concern and require for their management advanced techniques with economic benefits

821

and environmental safety. It was made evident, that the development of sustainable and efficient

822

refining of SCG depends on the spectrum of various end-products, market outlets and cost-

823

effective processing schemes. It was documented that polysaccharides, phenolic compounds,

824

tannins, biodiesel, bioethanol can be produced from the SCG, by using mono-extraction

825

processes, while a cascade biorefinery can produce fuels, energy, carbon materials and biochar,

826

in a closing loop approach, in addition.

827

SCG cascade or integrated biorefinery seems to be a more economically viable and

828

resource efficient option, compared to strategies relying on complete biomass disintegration,

829

that do not lead to optimal utilization of biomass feedstock. Cascading approaches are favorable

830

because they maximize biomass recycling with material and energy recovery.

831

contributing to more sustainable and circular economies, SCG cascade biorefinery seems to

832

have a commercial value.

Besides,

833

A shortage of economic and environmental assessments was observed in the international

834

literature, so it was difficult to draw concise economic and environmental conclusions for the

835

SCG biorefinery options, with the exception of a study performed by Brazilian researchers

836

(Mussatto et al., 2013), on integrated biorefinery of the Brazilian case of spent grains (BSG)

837

for the production of xylitol, lactic acid, activated carbon and phenolic acids, integrated with

838

heat production. This study provided good economic and environmental indicators, with an

839

economic margin of 62.25%, potential environmental impact of 0.012 PEI/kg products, and the

840

carbon footprint of the processing stage represented 0.96 kg CO2-e/kg of BSG.

841

Considering findings from this review, it seems that efforts are required to sustainability

842

assessment, policy analysis and national regulatory framework harmonization to the EU, that

843

are the drivers of change in food-waste reduction and valorization. Different national policies

36

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

844

apply to bio-waste management, can delay the utilization of advanced bio-waste valorization

845

methods. There is an urgent need for creation of technical standards and indicators to guide

846

and regulate the assessment of the sustainability of SCGs-based biorefineries. LCA proposed

847

as a valid tool to support designers, and decision-makers towards promoting and developing

848

sustainable solutions.

849

Only one paper found to assess theoretically SCG collection and valorization in a circular

850

economy (Topi and Bilinska, 2017), concluding that collection and valorization of SCG is

851

technically feasible with available technology, within current infrastructure, and modest

852

investments. In this case, the economic case is very attractive to investors.

853

Based upon the analysis of the papers, the authors found that there is an urgent need for

854

R&D, effective regulations, methodological approaches to design and estimation of the SCG

855

collection systems, investment and manufacturing costs, indicators development for

856

assessments prior to the development of new business models within a Circular Bieconomy.

857

Through the review some guidelines were highlighted, useful for the design of biorefineries.

858 859 860 861

References

862 863

Al-Dhabi, N.A., Ponmurugan, K., Jeganathan, P.M., 2017. Development and validation of

864

ultrasound-assisted solid-liquid extraction of phenolic compounds from waste spent

865

coffee grounds. Ultrasonics Sonochemistry 34, 206–213.

37

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

866

Al-Hamamre, Z., Foerster, S., Hartmann, F., Kröger, M., Kaltschmitt, M., 2012. Oil extracted

867

from spent coffee grounds as a renewable source for fatty acid methyl ester

868

manufacturing. Fuel, 96, 70-76.

869 870

Arya, M. and Rao, L.J.M., 2007. An Impression of Coffee Carbohydrates. Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition 47(1), 51-67.

871

Azmir, J., Zaidul, I.S.M., Rahman, M.M., Sharif, K.M., Mohamed, A., Sahena, F., Jahurul,

872

M.H.A., Ghafoor, K., Norulaini, N.A.N., Omar, A.K.M., 2013. Techniques for extraction

873

of bioactive compounds from plant materials: A review. Journal of Food Engineering

874

117, 426–436.

875

Ballesteros, L. F., Teixeira, J. A., & Mussatto, S. I., 2015. Chemical, functional and structural

876

properties of spent coffee grounds and coffee silverskin. Food and Bioprocess

877

Technology, 7, 3493–3503.

878

Ballesteros, L.F., Teixeira, J.A., Mussatto, S.I., 2017. Extraction of polysaccharides by

879

autohydrolysis of spent coffee grounds and evaluation of their antioxidant activity.

880

Carbohydrate Polymers 157, 258–266.

881

Barbosa, H.M.A., De Melo, M.M.R., Coimbra, M.A., Passos, C.P., Silva, C.M., 2014.

882

Optimization of the supercritical fluid coextraction of oil and diterpenes from spent

883

coffee grounds using experimental design and response surface methodology. Journal of

884

Supercritical Fluids 85, 165–172.

885

Bernstein, M., Woods, M., 2012. New Biorefinery Finds Treasure in Starbucks’ Spent Coffee

886

Grounds and Stale Bakery Goods. 244th National Meeting & Exposition of the American

887

Chemical

888

http://portal.acs.org/portal/acs/corg/content?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=PP_ARTIL

Society,

Philadelphia,

38

PA,

20

Aug

2012.

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

889 890

Bok, J.P., Choi, H.S., Choi, Y.S., Park, H.C., Kim, S.J., 2012. Fast pyrolysis of coffee grounds: Characteristics of product yields and biocrude oil quality. Energy 47, 17-24.

891

Bravo, J., Juániz, I., Monente, C., Caemmerer, B., Kroh, L.W., Peña, M.P.D., Cid, C., 2012.

892

Evaluation of spent coffee obtained from the most common coffeemakers as a source of

893

hydrophilic bioactive compounds. J. Agric. Food Chem. 60, 12565–12573.

894 895 896 897

Bravo, J., Monente, C., Juániz, I., Peña, M.P.D., Cid, C., 2013. Influence of extraction process on antioxidant capacity of spent coffee. Food Res. Int. 20, 610–616. Brazinha, C., Cadima, M., Crespo, J.G., 2015. Valorisation of spent coffee through membrane processing. Journal of Food Engineering 149, 123-130.

898

Budzianowski Wojciech M., 2017. High-value low-volume bioproducts coupled to bioenergies

899

with potential to enhance business development of sustainable biorefineries. Renewable

900

and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 70, 793-804.

901

Burniol-Figols, A., Ceniana, K., Skiadas, I.V., Gavala, H.N., 2016. Integration of chlorogenic

902

acid recovery and bioethanol production from spent coffee grounds. Biochemical

903

Engineering Journal 116, 54–64.

904

Caetano, N.S., Silva, V.F.M., Melo, A.C., Martins, A.A., Mata, T.M., 2014. Spent coffee

905

grounds for biodiesel production and other applications. Clean Techn Environ Policy 16,

906

1423–1430.

907

Campos-Vega, R., Loarca-Pina, G., Vergara-Castaneda, H.A., Oomah, B.D., 2015. Spent

908

coffee grounds: A review on current research and future prospects. Trends in Food

909

Science & Technology 45, 24-36.

910

Campos-Vega, R., Vázquez-Sánchez, K., López-Barrera, D., Loarca-Piña, G., Mendoza-Díaz,

911

S., Oomah, B.D., 2015b. Simulated gastrointestinal digestion and in vitro colonic

39

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

912

fermentation of spent coffee (Coffea arabica L.): bioaccessibility and intestinal

913

permeability. Food Res. Intern. 77, 156–161.

914

Cho, D.-W., Kwon, E.E., Kwon, G., Zhang, S., Lee, S.-R., Song, H., 2017. Co-pyrolysis of

915

paper mill sludge and spent coffee ground using CO2 as reaction medium. Journal of CO2

916

Utilization 21, 572-579.

917

Cho, D.-W., Lee, J., Yoon, K., Ok, Y.S., Kwon, E.E., Song, H., 2016. Pyrolysis of FeCl3-

918

pretreated spent coffee grounds using CO2 as a reaction medium. Energy Conversion and

919

Management 127, 437–442.

920

Ciesielczuk, T., Karwaczyńska, U., Sporek, M., 2015. The possibility of disposing of spent

921

coffee ground with energy recycling. Journal of Ecological Engineering 16, 4, 133–138.

922

Cristóbal, J., Caldeira, C., Corrado, S., Sala, S., 2018. Techno-economic and profitability

923

analysis of food waste biorefineries at European level. Bioresource Technology 259,

924

244-252.

925

Cruz, R., Cardoso, M.M., Fernandes, L., Oliveira, M., Mendes, E., Baptista, P., 2012. Espresso

926

coffee residues: a valuable source of unextracted compounds. Journal of Agricultural and

927

Food Chemistry, 60 (32), 7777-7784.

928

Dahiya, S., Kumar, A.N., Shanthi Sravan, J., Chatterjee, S., Sarkar, O., Mohan, S.V., 2016.

929

Food waste biorefinery: Sustainable strategy for circular bioeconomy. Bioresour

930

Technol. 215, 2-12.

931

De Benedetto, L., Klemes, J., 2009. The Environmental Performance Strategy Map: an

932

integrated LCA approach to support the strategic decision-making process. Journal of

933

Cleaner Production 17(10), 900-906. https//doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2009.02.012

40

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

934

De Melo, M.M.R., Hugo M.A. Barbosa, H.M.A., Passos, C.P., Silva, C.M., 2014. Supercritical

935

fluid extraction of spent coffee grounds: Measurement of extraction curves, oil

936

characterization and economic analysis. J. of Supercritical Fluids 86, 150–159.

937

De Souza, A.L., Garcia, R., Cabral, L., Bernardino, F.S., Zervoudakis, J.T., Rocha, F.C., 2004.

938

Coffee hulls in diets of dairy cows: nitrogenous compounds balance. Poultry Science,

939

83, 51.

940 941 942 943

Delgado, P.A., Vignoli, J.A., Siika-aho, M., Franco, T.T., 2008. Sediments in coffee extracts: composition and control by enzymatic hydrolysis. Food Chemistry, 110 (1), 168-176. Döhlert, P., Weidauer, M., Enthaler, S., 2016. Spent coffee ground as source for hydrocarbon fuels. Journal of Energy Chemistry 25, 146-152.

944

Efthymiopoulos, I., Hellier, P., Ladommatos, N., Russo-Profili, A., Mills-Lamptey, B., 2018.

945

Influence of solvent selection and extraction temperature on yield and composition of

946

lipids extracted from spent coffee grounds. Industrial Crops and Products, 119, 49-56.

947

European Commission, 2011. A Roadmap for Moving to a Competitive Low Carbon Economy

948

in 2050. Communication from the commission to the European Parliament, the council,

949

the European Economic and Social Committee and the committee of the regions. COM

950

(2011) final. Brussels.

951 952 953 954

Expert

Perspectives,

Long

term

climate

strategies,

World

resources

institute.

http://www.wri.org/climate/expert-perspectives (Accessed: 5th June 2018) FAO, 2013. Food Wastage Footprint. Impacts on Natural Resources. Summary Report. http://www.fao.org/docrep/018/i3347e/i3347e.pdf

955

Food, What We do. World resources institute.

956

Galanakis, M., CH., 2017. Handbook of Coffee Processing By-Products Sustainable

957

Applications, Academic Press, London, UK.

41

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

958

García, C.A., Moncada, J., Aristizábal, V., Cardona, C.A., 2017. Techno-economic and

959

energetic assessment of hydrogen production through gasification in the Colombian

960

context: Coffee Cut-Stems case. Int J Hydrogen Energy 42, 5849 – 5864.

961

Go, Y.W. and Yeom, S.H., 2017. Statistical Analysis and Optimization of Biodiesel Production

962

from Waste Coffee Grounds by a Two-step Process. Biotechnology and Bioprocess

963

Engineering 22, 440-449.

964 965

Hao, Z., Yang, B., Jahng, D., 2018. Spent coffee ground as a new bulking agent for accelerated biodrying of dewatered sludge. Water Research, 138, 250-263

966

Heeger, A., Kosinska-Cagnazzo, A., Cantergiani, E., Andlauer, W., 2017. Bioactives of coffee

967

cherry pulp and its utilisation for production of Cascara beverage. Food Chemistry 221,

968

969–975.

969

Huang, Q., Liu, X., Zhao, G., Hu, T., Wang, Y., 2017. Potential and challenges of tannins as an

970

alternative to in-feed antibiotics for farm animal production. Animal Nutrition, In press,

971

Available online 14 October 2017.

972

Ingrao, C., Bacenetti, J., Bezama, A., Blok, V., Goglio, P., Koukios, E., Lindner, M., Nemecek

973

Th., Siracusa, V., Zabaniotou, A., Huisingh, D. (2018a). The potential roles of bio-

974

economy in the transition to equitable, sustainable, post fossil-carbon societies: Findings

975

from this virtual special issue. Journal of Cleaner Production, 204, 471-488.

976

Ingrao, C., Faccilongo, N., Di Gioia, L., Messineo, A., (2018b) Food waste recovery into energy

977

in a circular economy perspective: A comprehensive review of aspects related to plant

978

operation and environmental assessment. Journal of Cleaner Production, 184, 869-892.

979

Jenkins, R.W., Stageman, N.E., Fortune, C.M., Chuck, C.J., 2014. Effect of the type of bean,

980

processing, and geographical location on the biodiesel produced from waste coffee

981

grounds. Energy Fuels, 28, 1166-1174.

42

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

982

Jimenez-Zamora, A., Pastoriza, S., Rufian-Henares, J.A., 2015. Revalorization of coffee by-

983

products. Prebiotic, antimicrobial and antioxidant properties. LWT - Food Science and

984

Technology 61, 12-18.

985

Jung, K-W., Choi, B.H., Hwang, M.-J., Jeong, T.-U., Ahn, K.-H., 2016. Fabrication of granular

986

activated carbons derived from spent coffee grounds by entrapment in calcium alginate

987

beads for adsorption of acid orange 7 and methylene blue. Bioresource Technology 219,

988

185–195.

989

Jungmeier,

G.,

2009.

The

Biorefinery

Complexity

Index.

Working

Document.

990

https://nachhaltigwirtschaften.at/resources/iea_pdf/reports/iea_bioenergy_task42_biore

991

finery_complexity_index_working_document_july_2014.pdf (Accessed: 8th June 2018)

992

Kachrimanidou, V., Kopsahelis, N., Alexandri, M., Strati, A., Gardeli, C., Papanikolaou, S.,

993

Komaitis, M., Kookos, I.K., Koutinas, A., 2015. Integrated sunflower-based biorefinery

994

for the production of antioxidants, protein isolate and poly(3-hydroxybutyrate). Crops

995

Prod., 71, 106-113.

996

Karmee Sanjib Kumar, 2018. A spent coffee grounds based biorefinery for the production of

997

biofuels, biopolymers, antioxidants and biocomposites. Waste Management 72, 240-254.

998

Kelkar, S., Saffron, C.M., Chai, L., Bovee, J., Stuecken, T.R., Garedew, M., Li, Z., Kriegel,

999

R.M., 2015. Pyrolysis of spent coffee grounds using a screw-conveyor reactor. Fuel

1000

Processing Technology 137, 170–178.

1001

Kim, M.S., Min, H.G., Koo, N., Park, J., Kim, J.G., 2014. The effectiveness of spent coffee

1002

grounds and its biochar on the amelioration of heavy metals-contaminated water and soil

1003

using chemical and biological assessments. Journal of Environmental Management 146,

1004

15 124-130.

43

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1005 1006

Kondamudi, N., Mohapatra, S.K., Misra, M., 2008. Spent Coffee Grounds as a Versatile Source of Green Energy. J. Agric. Food Chem. 56, 11757–11760.

1007

Kookos, I.K., 2018. Technoeconomic and environmental assessment of a process for biodiesel

1008

production from spent coffee grounds (SCGs). Resources, Conservation and Recycling,

1009

134, 156-164.

1010

Kourmentza, C., Economou, Ch.N., Tsafrakidou, P., Kornaros, M., 2018. Spent coffee grounds

1011

make much more than waste: Exploring recent advances and future exploitation

1012

strategies for the valorization of an emerging food waste stream. Journal of Cleaner

1013

Production 172, 980-992.

1014

Laksaci, A., Khelifi, A., Trari, M., Addoun, A., 2017. Synthesis and characterization of

1015

microporous activated carbon from coffee grounds using potassium hydroxides. Journal

1016

of Cleaner Production 147, 254-262.

1017

Lazell, J., Magrizos, S., Carrigan, M., 2018. Over-claiming the circular economy: the missing

1018

dimensions.

1019

http://eprints.keele.ac.uk/id/eprint/4556 (Accessed: 5th June 2018)

1020 1021 1022 1023

Westburn

Publishers

Ltd.,

Social

Business.

Li, X., Strezov, V., Kan, T., 2014. Energy recovery potential analysis of spent coffee grounds pyrolysis products. Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis 110, 79–87. Limousy, L., Jeguirim, M., Labaki, M., 2017. Chapter 11: Energy applications of coffee processing by-products. Handbook of Coffee Processing By-Products, 323-367.

1024

Low, J.H., Rahman, W.A.W.A., Jamaluddin, J., 2015. The influence of extraction parameters

1025

on spent coffee grounds as a renewable tannin resource. Journal of Cleaner Production

1026

101, 222-228.

44

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1027

Loyao, A.S., S.L.G., Villasica, Dela Peña, P.L.L., Go, A.W., 2018. Extraction of lipids from

1028

spent coffee grounds with non-polar renewable solvents as alternative. Industrial Crops

1029

and Products, 119, 152-161.

1030

Luz, F.C., Cordiner, S., Manni, A., Mulone, V., Rocco, V., 2017. Anaerobic digestion of coffee

1031

grounds soluble fraction at laboratory scale: Evaluation of the biomethane potential.

1032

Applied Energy 207, 166–175.

1033

Magalhães, L.M., Machado, S., Segundo, M.A., Lopes, J.A., Páscoa, R.N.M.J., 2016. Rapid

1034

assessment of bioactive phenolics and methylxanthines in spent coffee grounds by FT-

1035

NIR spectroscopy, Talanta 147, 460–467.

1036

Maina, S., Kachrimanidou, V., Koutinas, A., 2017. A roadmap towards a circular and

1037

sustainable bioeconomy through waste valorization. Current Opinion in Green and

1038

Sustainable Chemistry 8, 18-23.

1039

Martins, S., Mussatto, S.I., Martínez-Avila, G., Montañez-Saenz, J., Aguilar, C.N., Teixeira,

1040

J.A., 2011. Bioactive phenolic compounds: production and extraction by solid state

1041

fermentation: a review. Biotechnol. Adv. 29, 365–373.

1042 1043

Mata, T.M., Martins, A.A., Caetano, N.S., 2018. Bio-refinery approach for spent coffee grounds valorization. Bioresour. Technol. 247, 1077-1084.

1044

Mayanga-Torres, P.C., Lachos-Perez, D., Rezende, C.A., Pradoc, J.M., Ma, ZA., Tompsett

1045

G.T., Timko, M.T., Forster-Carneiro, T., 2017. Valorization of coffee industry residues

1046

by subcritical water hydrolysis: Recovery of sugars and phenolic compounds. J. of

1047

Supercritical Fluids 120, 75–85.

1048

Missio, A.L., Mattos, B.D., Ferreira, D.F., Magalhães, W.L.E., Tondi, G., 2018. Nanocellulose-

1049

tannin films: From trees to sustainable active packaging. Journal of Cleaner Production,

1050

184, 143-151.

45

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1051

Mohan S.V., Nikhil G.N., Chiranjeevi, P., Reddy C.N., Rohit, M.V., Kumar, A.N., Sarkar, O.,

1052

2016. Waste biorefinery models towards sustainable circular bioeconomy: Critical

1053

review and future perspectives. Bioresour Technol. 215, 2-12.

1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059

Moncada J.B., Aristizábal V.M., Cardona C.A.A., 2016. Design strategies for sustainable biorefineries. Biochemical Engineering Journal, 116, 122-134. Morone, P., Papendiek, Fr., Tartiu, V. E., 2017. Food Waste Reduction and Valorisation, Springer, Cham. ISBN 978-3-319-50088-1 Murthy, P.S. and Naidu, M.M., 2012. Sustainable management of coffee industry by-products and value addition – A review. Resourc, Conservation and recycling, 66, 45-58.

1060

Mussatto S.I., Moncada J., Roberto I.C., Cardona C.A., 2013. Techno-economic analysis for

1061

brewer's spent grains use on a biorefinery concept: the Brazilian case. Bioresour Technol.

1062

148:302-10. doi: 10.1016/j.biortech.2013.08.046.

1063 1064

Mussatto, S.I., Ballesteros, L.F., Martins, S., Teixeira, J.A., 2011. Extraction of antioxidant phenolic compounds from spent coffee grounds. Sep. Purif. Technol. 83, 173–179.

1065

Obruca, S., Benesova, P., Petrika, S., Oborna, J., Prikryl, R., Marova, I., 2014. Production of

1066

polyhydroxyalkanoates using hydrolysate of spent coffee grounds. Process Biochemistry

1067

49, 1409–1414.

1068

Pacioni, T.R., Soares, D., Di Domenico, M., Rosa, M.F., Moreira, R.F.P.M, José, H.J., 2016.

1069

Bio-syngas production from agro-industrial biomass residues by steam gasification.

1070

Waste Management 58, 221–229.

1071

Panusa, A., Zuorro, A., Lavecchia, R., Marrosu, G., Petrucci, R., 2013. Recovery of natural

1072

antioxidants from spent coffee grounds. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry,

1073

61(17), 4162-4168.

46

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1074

Park, J., Kim, B., Son, J., Lee, J.W., 2018. Solvo-thermal in situ transesterification of wet spent

1075

coffee grounds for the production of biodiesel. Bioresour Technol 249, 494-500.

1076

Passos, C.P. and Coimbra, M.A., 2013. Microwave superheated water extraction of

1077

polysaccharides from spent coffee grounds. Carbohydrate Polymers 94, 626–633.

1078

Phimsen, S., Kiatkittipong, W., Yamada, H., Tagawa, T., Kiatkittipong, K., Laosiripojana, N.,

1079

Assabumrungrat, S., 2016. Oil extracted from spent coffee grounds for bio-hydrotreated

1080

diesel production. Energ Convers Manage 126, 1028-1036.

1081 1082

Rama Mohan, S., 2016. Strategy and design of Innovation Policy Road Mapping for a waste biorefinery. Bioresour Technol 215, 76-83.

1083

Redondo, L.M., Chacana, B.A., Dominguez, J.E., Miyakawa, M.E.F., 2014. Perspectives in the

1084

use of tannins as alternative to antimicrobial growth promoter factors in poultry. Front.

1085

Microbiol. 5, 118.

1086

Salazar, I.X.C, 2013. Design and Evaluation of Processes to Obtain Antioxidant-Rich

1087

Extracts from Tropical Fruits Cultivated in Amazon, Caldas and Northern Tolima Regions, PhD

1088

Thesis, Departamento de Ingeniería Química, Universidad Nacional de Colombia sede

1089

Manizales.

1090

Scarlat, N., Dallemand, J.F., Monforti-Ferrario, F., Nita, V., 2015. The role of biomass and

1091

bioenergy in a future bioeconomy: Policies and facts. Environ Dev 15, 3-340.

1092

Shang, Y.F., Xu, J.L., Lee, W.J., Um, B.H., 2017. Antioxidative polyphenolics obtained from

1093

spent coffee grounds by pressurized liquid extraction. South African Journal of Botany

1094

109, 75–80.

1095

Sharif, K.M., Rahman, M.M., Azmir, J., Mohamed, A., Jahurul, M.H.A., Sahena, F. Zaidul,

1096

I.S.M., 2014. Experimental design of supercritical fluid extraction – A review. Journal

1097

of Food Engineering 124, 105–116.

47

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1098 1099 1100 1101

Shavandi, A., Bekhit, A.E.A., Saeedi, P., Izadifar, Z., Khademhosseini , A., 2018. Polyphenol uses in biomaterials engineering. Biomaterials 167, 91-106. Shi, L., 2016. Bioactivities, isolation and purification methods of polysaccharides from natural products: A review. Int J Biol Macromol. 92, 37-48.

1102

Soares, B., Gama, N., Freire, C.S.R., Barros-Timmons, A., Brandão, I., Silva, R., Neto, C.P.,

1103

Ferreira, A., 2014. Spent coffee grounds as a renewable source for ecopolyols

1104

production. Journal of Chemical Technology and Biotechnology 90, 8, 1480-1488.

1105

Somnuk, K., Eawlex, P., Prateepchaikul, G., 2017. Optimization of coffee oil extraction from

1106

spent coffee grounds using four solvents and prototype-scale extraction using circulation

1107

process. Agriculture and Natural Resources 51, 181-189.

1108

Thurer, M., Tomasevic, I., Stevenson, M., Qu, T., Huisingh, D., 2018. A systematic review of

1109

the literature on integrating sustainability into engineering curricula. Journal of Cleaner

1110

Production, 181, 608-617.

1111

Topi C., Bilinska M. (2017) The Economic Case for the Circular Economy: From Food Waste

1112

to Resource. In: Morone P., Papendiek F., Tartiu V. (eds) Food Waste Reduction and

1113

Valorisation. Springer, Cham

1114

United

Nations

Development

Program,

Sustainable

Development

Goals,

1115

http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/sustainable-development-goals.html

1116

(Accessed: 5th June 2018).

1117

2018.

USDA, United States Department of Agriculture, 2017. Coffee: World Markets and Trade.

1118

Foreign

Agricultural

1119

circulars/coffee.pdf .

Service,

June

48

2017.

https://apps.fas.usda.gov/psdonline/

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1120

Vânia, G., Zuinc Luize, Z. Ramin (2018). Top Curr Chem (Cham). 2018; 376(1): 3.Bioresour

1121

Technol. 2018 Jan;248(Pt A):2-12. doi: 10.1016/j.biortech.2017.07.176. Epub 2017 Aug

1122

2. Food waste biorefinery: Sustainable strategy for circular Bioeconomy.

1123

Vardon, D.R., Moser, B.R., Zheng, W., Witkin, K., Evangelista, R.L., Strathmann, T.J.,

1124

Rajagopalan, K., Sharma, B.K., 2013. Complete Utilization of Spent Coffee Grounds To

1125

Produce Biodiesel, Bio-Oil, and Biochar. ACS Sustainable Chem Eng 1, 10, 1286–1294.

1126

Wang, H.M.D, Cheng, Y.S, Huang, C.H., Huan, C.W., 2016. Optimization of High Solids

1127

Dilute Acid Hydrolysis of Spent Coffee Ground at Mild Temperature for Enzymatic

1128

Saccharification and Microbial Oil Fermentation. Appl Biochem Biotechnol 180:753–

1129

765.

1130

Xu, H., Wang, W., Liu, X., Yuan, F., Gao, Y., 2015. Antioxidative phenolics obtained from

1131

spent coffee grounds (Coffea arabica L.) by subcritical water extraction. Industrial Crops

1132

and Products 76, 946–954.

1133 1134

Yang, L., He, Q., Havard, P., Corscadden, K., Xu, C., Wang, X., 2017. Co-liquefaction of spent coffee grounds and lignocellulosic feedstocks. Bioresource Technology 237, 108–121.

1135

Yang, L., Nazari, L. Yuan, Z., Corscadden, K., Xu, C., He, Q., 2016. Hydrothermal liquefaction

1136

of spent coffee grounds in water medium for bio-oil production. Biomass and Bioenergy,

1137

86, 191-198.

1138

Zabaniotou, A., Kamaterou, P., Kachrimanidou, V., Vlysidis, A., Koutinas, A., 2017. Taking a

1139

reflexive TRL2-4 approach to sustainable use of sunflower meal for the transition from

1140

a mono-process pathway to a cascade bio refinery in the context of Circular Bio-

1141

economy.

1142

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.01.151.

Journal

of

Cleaner

49

Production,

172

4119-4129.

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

1143

Zabaniotou, A., Kamaterou, P., Pavlou, A., Panayiotou, C., 2018. Sustainable bioeconomy

1144

transitions: Targeting value capture by integrating pyrolysis in a winery waste

1145

biorefinery.

1146

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.11.077

1147 1148

Journal

of

Cleaner

Production,

172,

3387-3397.

Zuorro, A., Lavecchia, R., 2012. Spent coffee grounds as a valuable source of phenolic compounds and bioenergy. Journal of Cleaner Production, 34, 49-56.

50

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Fig. 1. Published articles concerning SCG, per year of publication. Fig. 2. Published articles on single-extraction process products, per year of publication. Fig. 3. High added value products derived from a single-extraction process. Fig. 4

SCG thermochemical conversion processes and their products.

Fig. 5. SCG biorefineries reported in literature.

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Fig. 1

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Fig. 2

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Fig. 3

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Fig. 4

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Fig. 5

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

TABLES

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Table 1. Screening procedure of peer review articles Number of articles in Screening Step

Sample

1.

First sample

630

2.

Sample after duplicates removal

374

3.

Sample after less relevant articles removal

333

4.

Remaining sample after cut-off point

320

5.

Final sample

6.

Books

7. Internet sources Final Sample

92 3 7 102

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Table 2. SCG biochemical composition (wt%db) Lipids

Carbohydrates

Proteins

(wt%db) n.d.

(wt%db) 14.1

(wt%db) 14.4

Somnuk et al., (2017)

9-16

45-47

13-17

Burniol-Figols et al., (2016)

13±0.04

65.9±6.5

4.9±0.6

Passos and Coimbra., (2013)

13.7±0.1

54.1±2.2

13.8±0.1

Wang et al., (2016)

45.3

13.6

Campos-Vega et al., (2015)

References

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Table 3. Proximate and ultimate analysis of SCG Ultimate Analysis (ww%db) C

H

N

S

O

References

53.0

6.8

2.1

0.1

38.1

Somnuk et al., (2017)

52.5±0.4

7.0±0.03

3.46±0.01 0.10±0.00 34.8±0.1

Tsai et al., (2012)

Proximate Analysis (ww%db) Moisture

Volatile

Ash

Fixed Carbon

-

-

1.6

-

Somnuk et al., (2017)

11.5±0.4

79.5±0.01

0.7±0.2

8.2

Tsai et al., (2012)

Table 4. Single-extraction SGC processes for high added value compounds reported in the literature SCGs single-extraction process Reference

Somnuk et al. (2017)

Process Parameters

Process

Oil extraction

Extraction characteristics (Solvent Extr) Hexane Ethanol anhydr. Ethanol hydrous Methanol

Phimsen (Soxhlet extr.) et al. Hexane (2017) Mussato Sulfuric acid et al. (2011) Polysacharides Ballesteros extraction (Autohydrolysis) et al. Water (2017) (Microwave Passos superheated et al. water extraction) (2013) Water (Subcritical Xu et al. Phenolics water extraction) (2015) extraction Water Shang et Phenolics and (Pressurized

Oil Polysacharides SCG/Solvent Extraction Temperature (w/w% (w/w% d.b.) ratio (g/g) time (min) d.b.) (°C) 22.5 30.4 30 14.7 22.8 33.5 30 13.1 20.3 25.5 30 11.8 23.8

19.6

400g/3l

480

0.5M

45

1g/15ml

30

Product Phenolics (w/w% d.b.) -

Tannins Caffeine (mg/g (mg/g d.b.) d.b.) -

7.5

-

-

-

-

13

-

-

-

-

121

-

45.3

-

-

-

10

160

-

29.29

234.1407 mg GAE/g

-

-

1gSCG/10ml

2

200

-

55

-

-

-

14.1g/l

38-55

160-180

-

-

86.2 mg GAE/g

-

-

195

-

-

19-26

-

3-9

al. (2017)

Caffeine extraction

liquid extraction) Water

mgGAE/gdb

Ethanol Low et al. (2015) Brazinha et al. (2015)

Tannins’ Extraction

Sodium hydroxide 5wt%

Caffeine extraction

Membrane technology

8.2

30

mg/g db

195

-

-

-

-

-

100

-

-

-

21.02

-

-

-

-

-

3-9

Table 5. SCG biorefinery approaches reported in literature. No Reference Processes a. Phenols extraction 1 BurniolFigols et al. (2016) b. Acid hydrolysis

2

3

4

c. Ethanol Fermentation Obruca et al. a. Oil extraction (2015) b. Polyphenols extraction c. Bacterial Fermentation Caetano et a. 1st SCG Extraction al. (2017) b. 2nd SCG Extraction c. Transesterification d. Drying & Pelleting e. Pyrolysis and Torrefaction f. Hydrolysis & Fermentation Vardon et a. Oil extraction al. (2013) b. Transesterification c. Slow pyrolysis *L/S ratio= Liquid to Solid ratio

Parameters Solvent: Ethanol Temperature: 70°C L/S*: 25ml solvent/g TS liquidratioH2SO4 1solid w/w% Temperature: 140°C Time: 45 min L/S*: 10g liquid/g TS Strain: Saccharomyces cerevisiae Solvent: n-hexane Solvent: Ethanol Bacteria: Burkholderia cepacia Solvent: water/ethanol/supercritical CO

Products Chlorogenic acid

Bioethanol Oil Polyphenols PHAs High value extracts: antioxidants, caffeine, tannins, polyphenols, etc. Triglycerides Biodiesel, Glycerin, Hydrogen Pellets Biochar, biooil Ethanol Oil Biodiesel Biochar, biooil