Funmilayo Patricia Afolabi’s research while affiliated with Obafemi Awolowo University and other places

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Publications (3)


Stabilisation of groundnut oil with gallic acid and leaf extracts of Lonchocarpus sericeus and Lonchocarpus cyanescens
  • Article

January 2025

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8 Reads

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Funmilayo Patricia Afolabi

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Mutalib Adeniran Aderogba

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[...]

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Olukayode Solomon Ajayi

This study evaluated the antioxidant properties of two Lonchocarpus species leaves extracts. It also profiled the phenolic constituents of their active fractions using HPLC. Of the four solvent fractions obtained, ethyl acetate of Lonchocarpus cyanescens (LC) had the highest antioxidant activity [MCA (IC50), DPPH (IC50), FRAP, TAC, TFC and TPC with 0.673 ± 0.061 μg/mL, 0.245 ± 0.007 μg/mL, 177.6 ± 3.7 mg AAE/g, 202.5 ± 3.6 mg AAE/g, 1,323.1 ± 16.7 μg CE/g and 1244.3 ± μg GAE/g values, respectively]. The processing of the groundnut oil was observed to compromise its natural defence system. Gallic acid was the best of the three antioxidant agents used to stabilize groundnut oil followed by the ethyl acetate fraction of LC, and butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) the least. It can be concluded that gallic acid and ethyl acetate fraction of LC could be used to replace BHA implicated in aetiology of cancer but safety and acceptability of their use in vegetable oil should be investigated.



Physical Properties of Crude and Processed Groundnut Oil
Evaluation of the Effects of processing on Physicochemical Properties of the Freshly Extracted Crude Groundnut Oil
  • Preprint
  • File available

February 2023

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82 Reads

The effect of processing on physicochemical properties of freshly extracted crude groundnut oil was determined. Crude groundnut oil was extracted following the traditional method and half of it was processed as done industrially. Chemical properties [acid value, free fatty acid, peroxide value, saponification value, ester value, iodine value, total phenol (TP), p-Anisidine value, total tocopherol (TT), and total antioxidant capacity (TAC) and thiobarbituric acid reactive species (TBARS)] and physical properties (refractive index, surface tension, smoke point, flash point, viscosity and specific gravity) were determined following the AOAC and other standard methods. Analysis of the results indicated that the processing of the crude groundnut oil, although improved the physical appearance and reduced free fatty acid by 56% hence, could improve its stability but it also compromised the levels of antioxidant compounds such as tocopherols in the oil that reduced by 16.4%. TAC, an antioxidant parameter also reduced by 92% while TBARS increased by 15.1%. It can be concluded that processing of groundnut oil could either improve its stability or compromise it, hence, there is need for the stability study of processed groundnut oil.

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