
Journal of Agricultural Chemistry and Environment, 2014, 3, 20-25
Published Online April 2014 in SciRes. http://www.scirp.org/journal/jacen
http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jacen.2014.32B004
How to cite this paper: Al-Shoaily, K., et al. (2014) Multivariate Study and Analysis of the Production of Citric Acid from
Dates by Surface Method. Journal of Agricultural Chemistry and Environment, 3, 20-25.
http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jacen.2014.32B004
Multivariate Study and Analysis of the
Production of Citric Acid from Dates by
Surface Method
Khalid Al-Shoaily*, Mansoura Al-Amri, Fouzia Al-Rawahi, Muhammad Al-Sidrani,
Amal Al-Ghafri
Food Processing Research Laboratory, Ministry of Agriculture & Fisheries, Muscat, Oman
Email: *kalshoaily@yah oo.com
Received January 2014
Abstract
The production of citric acid from dates of the date palm Phoenix dactilifera was studied using a
full factorial design with two design variables; Aspergillus niger strain, and starter juice treatment.
Analyses of data have shown that mould type and the interaction between Aspergillus niger strain
+ juice treatment had significant effect (P ≥ 0.05) on the final total acidity. It was also found that all
design variables and the interaction between them had significant effect (P ≥ 0.05) on the final pH
and Total Soluble Solids. The highest total acidity expressed as citric acid was achieved with a
commercial strain of Aspergillus niger, and filtered and centrifuged date juice.
Keywords
Dates; Citric; Aspergillus nige r
1. Introduction
Dates continue to be the most abundantly produced fruit in Oman; the annual total yield according to ministry of
agriculture and fisheries (MAF) Oman 2010 estimation was 276,405 tons. Although potentially there is very
valuable raw material for many industries, the almost exclusive use of dates is still direct consumption. The high
content of monosaccharides (glucose, and fructose) (Al-Farsi, Alasalvar et al. 2007) [1] makes the dates suitable
for fermentation to produce various organic acids such as acetic acid and citric acid.
Citric acid is an organic acid that naturally occurs in fruits such as lemons oranges, and may be synthesised
from glycerol (Kristiansen Bjorn, Mattey et al. 1999) [2]. It is also produced via fermentation by microorgan-
isms action, many microorganisms accumulate citric acid, among them is Aspergillus niger, A. awamori, Absi-
dia sp, Acremonium sp. ...etc. Nowadays Aspergillus niger is almost exclusively used to produce citric acid at
industrial scale (Kristian sen Bjorn, Mattey et al. 1999) [2]. Citric acid has a wide range of use in food and beve-
rage, in preparation of numerous industrial products, pharmaceuticals, and as a cleaning agent (Lotfy Walid A,
Ghanem Khaled M. et al. 2007) [3]. Factorial experimental des ign and multivariate an alysis is a useful tool used
*