DOI: 10.3390/pr14121994 ISSN: 2227-9717

Recovery of Added-Value Products from Biowaste by Subcritical and Supercritical Water Technologies—A Scoping Review

Jaroslava Švarc-Gajić, Tanja Brezo-Borjan, Jovana Degenek, Milana Maričić, Marina Čobanov, Ana-Marija Vujković Bukvin

The introduction of sustainable practices into waste management can have a favorable environmental impact, increase resource value, and yield economic gains. Hydrothermal technologies have strong potential for the production of up-cycled ingredients from biowaste (amino acids, sugars, phenols, pharmacologically active compounds, etc.), enabling high energy recovery (50–80%) from biowaste with net-negative carbon emissions. This review discusses the use of subcritical and supercritical water technologies for sustainable valorization of biowaste and conversion of biomass into high-value chemicals and biofuels. The potential for the extraction/generation of bioactive compounds from plant and animal waste is presented, emphasizing the efficiency, compound stability, and bioactivity of the fractions obtained. The possibilities of simultaneous extraction of added-value compounds and hydrolysis of feedstock biopolymers by these technologies are elaborated. The review further addresses the production of biofuels through hydrothermal carbonization for solid fuels, hydrothermal waste liquefaction for liquid fuels, and supercritical water gasification for gaseous fuels. The paper highlights the environmental and economic advantages of technologies based on sub- and supercritical water over conventional chemical and fermentative routes, emphasizing their contribution to a circular bioeconomy by converting biowaste into value-added products and sustainable energy sources.

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