13 research outputs found
Contact Problem of Viscoelastic Cylinder Rolling along a Viscoelastic Base with a Viscous Lubricant Layer
Evaluation of the contact strength and durability of plain bearings with different types of shaft lobing
Generalized method for calculating the durability of sliding bearings with technological out-of-roundness of details
Application of foam-mat drying with egg white for carrageenan: drying rate and product quality aspects
Size dependence of the magnetic relaxation and specific power absorption in iron oxide nanoparticles
Synthetic Models of Copper–Nitrosyl Species Proposed as Intermediates in Biological Denitrification
MOF the beaten track: unusual structures and uncommon applications of metal–organic frameworks
Bioactive compounds in seaweed; functional food applications and legislation
Seaweed is more than the wrap that keeps rice together in sushi. Seaweed biomass is already used for a wide range of other products in food, including stabilising agents. Biorefineries with seaweed as feedstock are attracting worldwide interest and include low-volume, high value-added products and vice versa. Scientific research on bioactive compounds in seaweed usually takes place on just a few species and compounds. This paper reviews worldwide research on bioactive compounds, mainly of nine genera or species of seaweed, which are also available in European temperate Atlantic waters, i.e. Laminaria sp., Fucus sp., Ascophyllum nodosum, Chondrus crispus, Porphyra sp., Ulva sp., Sargassum sp., Gracilaria sp. and Palmaria palmata. In addition, Undaria pinnatifida is included in this review as this is globally one of the most commonly produced, investigated and available species. Fewer examples of other species abundant worldwide have also been included. This review will supply fundamental information for biorefineries in Atlantic Europe using seaweed as feedstock. Preliminary selection of one or several candidate seaweed species will be possible based on the summary tables and previous research described in this review. This applies either to the choice of high value-added bioactive products to be exploited in an available species or to the choice of seaweed species when a bioactive compound is desired. Data are presented in tables with species, effect and test organism (if present) with examples of uses to enhance comparisons. In addition, scientific experiments performed on seaweed used as animal feed are presented, and EU, US and Japanese legislation on functional foods is reviewed
