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      A biorefinery approach for the valorization of spent coffee grounds to produce antioxidant compounds and biobutanol

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      Biomass and Bioenergy
      Elsevier BV

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          Use of a free radical method to evaluate antioxidant activity

          LWT - Food Science and Technology, 28(1), 25-30
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            The ferric reducing ability of plasma (FRAP) as a measure of "antioxidant power": the FRAP assay.

            A simple, automated test measuring the ferric reducing ability of plasma, the FRAP assay, is presented as a novel method for assessing "antioxidant power." Ferric to ferrous ion reduction at low pH causes a colored ferrous-tripyridyltriazine complex to form. FRAP values are obtained by comparing the absorbance change at 593 nm in test reaction mixtures with those containing ferrous ions in known concentration. Absorbance changes are linear over a wide concentration range with antioxidant mixtures, including plasma, and with solutions containing one antioxidant in purified form. There is no apparent interaction between antioxidants. Measured stoichiometric factors of Trolox, alpha-tocopherol, ascorbic acid, and uric acid are all 2.0; that of bilirubin is 4.0. Activity of albumin is very low. Within- and between-run CVs are <1.0 and <3.0%, respectively, at 100-1000 micromol/liter. FRAP values of fresh plasma of healthy Chinese adults: 612-1634 micromol/liter (mean, 1017; SD, 206; n = 141). The FRAP assay is inexpensive, reagents are simple to prepare, results are highly reproducible, and the procedure is straightforward and speedy. The FRAP assay offers a putative index of antioxidant, or reducing, potential of biological fluids within the technological reach of every laboratory and researcher interested in oxidative stress and its effects.
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              The determination of flavonoid contents in mulberry and their scavenging effects on superoxide radicals

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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Biomass and Bioenergy
                Biomass and Bioenergy
                Elsevier BV
                09619534
                April 2021
                April 2021
                : 147
                : 106026
                Article
                10.1016/j.biombioe.2021.106026
                e13fb355-2190-496d-be3b-0eb796638e80
                © 2021

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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