ASEAN Journal of Chemical Engineering
Vol 23, No 2 (2023)

Optimization of Defective Coffee Beans Decaffeination Using Palm Oil

Dian Shofinita (Department of Food Engineering, Faculty of Industrial Technology, Institut Teknologi Bandung Jl. Let. Jen. Purn. Dr. (HC) Mashudi No. 1/ Jl. Raya Jatinangor KM 20.75, Sumedang 45363, Indonesia)
Dianika Lestari (Department of Food Engineering, Faculty of Industrial Technology, Institut Teknologi Bandung Jl. Let. Jen. Purn. Dr. (HC) Mashudi No. 1/ Jl. Raya Jatinangor KM 20.75, Sumedang 45363, Indonesia)
Sekar Ayu Ambarwati (Department of Food Engineering, Faculty of Industrial Technology, Institut Teknologi Bandung Jl. Let. Jen. Purn. Dr. (HC) Mashudi No. 1/ Jl. Raya Jatinangor KM 20.75, Sumedang 45363, Indonesia)
Karen Christine Gunawan (Department of Food Engineering, Faculty of Industrial Technology, Institut Teknologi Bandung Jl. Let. Jen. Purn. Dr. (HC) Mashudi No. 1/ Jl. Raya Jatinangor KM 20.75, Sumedang 45363, Indonesia)
Amarthya Benigna Achmadi (Department of Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Industrial Technology, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Jl. Ganesa No. 10, Bandung 40132, Indonesia)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Aug 2023

Abstract

Defective coffee beans amount to 15-20% of the total produced coffee beans. The defective coffee bean contains caffeine, which can negatively affect the human body, such as increased heart rate, and thus sensitive to consumption by some people. This study aims to optimize the decaffeination process of defective coffee beans. The extraction of aroma and flavor compounds was done by maceration, and the decaffeination was carried out using palm oil as a solvent. The type of beans (green and roasted beans), the decaffeination contact time, and the ratio between coffee bean extract and solvent were varied in this study. The caffeine content was quantified, and the organoleptic and color tests were done on the concentrated coffee extracts. It was found that the higher the amount of solvent volume in decaffeination, the higher the caffeine decrease. In addition, the longer the green beans’ decaffeination time, the lower the caffeine decrease. Decaffeination using green coffee beans resulted in a greater reduction of caffeine (6.515-48.241%) than roasted coffee beans (8.495-24.272%). The optimum operating condition of green coffee bean decaffeination was the coffee bean extract and solvent ratio of 1:5.82 and the decaffeination time of 26.5 minutes. The organoleptic test result shows that decaffeinated coffee flavor had the same preferability as the commercial coffee flavor and was thus able to compete in the market.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

AJChE

Publisher

Subject

Biochemistry, Genetics & Molecular Biology Chemical Engineering, Chemistry & Bioengineering Chemistry

Description

The ASEAN Journal of Chemical Engineering publishes papers on Chemical Engineering, specifically but not limited to the areas of thermodynamics, reaction kinetics, transport phenomena, process control, environment, energy, biotechnology, corrosion, separation science, powder technology, materials ...