THE COMPOSITION OF SUGARCANE JUICES DERIVED FROM BURNT CANE AND WHOLE GREEN CANE CROP
By CCD THAI, WOS DOHERTY
THERE HAS been substantial interest within the Australian sugar industry in product
diversification as a means to reduce its exposure to fluctuating raw sugar prices and in
order to increase its commercial viability. In particular, the industry is looking at fibrous
residues from sugarcane harvesting (trash) and from sugarcane milling (bagasse) for
cogeneration and the production of biocommodities, as these are complementary to the
core process of sugar production. A means of producing surplus residue (biomass) is to
process whole sugarcane crop. In this paper, the composition of different juices derived
from different harvesting methods, viz. burnt cane with all trash extracted (BE), green
cane with half of the trash extracted (GE), and green cane (whole sugarcane crop) with
trash unextracted (GU), were investigated and the results and comparison presented.
The determination of electrical conductivity, inorganic composition, and organic acids
indicate that both GU and GE cane juice contain a higher proportion of soluble
inorganic ions and ionisable organic acids, compared to BE cane juice. It is important to
note that there are considerably higher levels of Na ions and citric acid, but relatively
low P levels in the GU samples. A higher level of reducing sugars was analysed in the
GU samples than the BE samples due to the higher proportion of impurities found
naturally in sugarcane tops and leaves. The purity of the first expressed juice (FEJ) of
GU cane was on average higher than that of FEJ of BE cane. Results also show that GU
juices appear to contain higher levels of proteins and polysaccharides, with no
significant difference in starch levels.