Back to Search Start Over

Minimizing hazardous impact of food waste in a circular economy – Advances in resource recovery through green strategies.

Authors :
Usmani, Zeba
Sharma, Minaxi
Awasthi, Abhishek Kumar
Sharma, Gauri Dutt
Cysneiros, Denise
Nayak, S.Chandra
Thakur, Vijay Kumar
Naidu, Ravi
Pandey, Ashok
Gupta, Vijai Kumar
Source :
Journal of Hazardous Materials. Aug2021, Vol. 416, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Recent trends in food waste and its management have increasingly started to focus on treating it as a reusable resource. The hazardous impact of food waste such as the release of greenhouse gases, deterioration of water quality and contamination of land areas are a major threat posed by food waste. Under the circular economy principles, food waste can be used as a sustainable supply of high-value energy, fuel, and nutrients through green techniques such as anaerobic digestion, co-digestion, composting, enzymatic treatment, ultrasonic, hydrothermal carbonization. Recent advances made in anaerobic co-digestion are helping in tackling dual or even multiple waste streams at once with better product yields. Integrated approaches that employ pre-processing the food waste to remove obstacles such as volatile fractions, oils and other inhibitory components from the feedstock to enhance their bioconversion to reduce sugars. Research efforts are also progressing in optimizing the operational parameters such as temperature, pressure, pH and residence time to enhance further the output of products such as methane, hydrogen and other platform chemicals such as lactic acid, succinic acid and formic acid. This review brings together some of the recent progress made in the green strategies towards food waste valorization. [Display omitted] • Food waste is a sustainable source of feedstock for production of valuable chemicals. • Addition of co-substrates to food can enhance the quality and yield of end-products. • Tuning operational parameters of valorization techniques can impact product quality. • Integrated strategies for food waste can tackle multiple waste streams economically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043894
Volume :
416
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Hazardous Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151007015
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.126154