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  Reprocessing under-utilised onion waste


   Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences

This project is no longer listed on FindAPhD.com and may not be available.

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  Dr D Charalampopoulos, Dr Stephen Elmore, Dr J Rodriquez Garcia, Dr A Chatzifragkou  No more applications being accepted  Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

"The project is funded by the BBSRC Collaborative Training Partnerships (CTP) scheme and will be conducted in collaboration with Unilever.
Background
Among vegetables, onion is the second most widely consumed crop, providing a relatively high value raw material for food industries. There are very large quantities of onion waste across current value chain (>6M tons in the Europe) which currently remain under exploited. The substantial amount of waste thus reduces the economic efficiency of the onion supply chain while also increasing the carbon footprint and environmental impact. The efficient food production with total usage of agricultural raw materials offers a wealth of opportunities for developing a smart circular economy. This proposal aims to develop technical understanding towards valorising onion side-streams using novel process technologies in order to create structuring ingredients and natural flavours, and to improve sustainability of the agro-food sector, thereby creating high economic value for the food sector.
Objectives
1. Map key onion waste/side streams across Europe, including an evaluation of stabilisation strategies, logistics and transport.
2. Tailor current methods and explore novel technologies for optimising the extraction, creation, stabilisation and application of functional biomaterials from onion waste/side streams
3. Understand how structuring properties are affected by onion fibre composition and can be maximized via suitable physicochemical modifications (e.g. via hydrothermal treatment, shear activation, etc, and/or scope new technologies)
Major Skills/Techniques PhD student will be trained on
Separation science & technology
Biotransformation of vegetable waste stream (enzymology/fermentation)
Bio-refinery concept including LCA modelling
General food chemistry/biochemistry
Informal enquiries:
Professor Dimitris Charalampopoulos, Department of Food & Nutritional Sciences, University of Reading, Tel.: 0118 3788216, Email: [Email Address Removed]"


Funding Notes

BBSRC Collaborative Training Partnerships (CTP)

Where will I study?