Wastewater treatment using a natural coagulant (Moringa oleifera seeds)

Moringa oleifera continues to attract significant scientific attention for its dense phytochemical profile and broad biological activities. This peer-reviewed study examines coagulant properties of moringa seeds, contributing to the growing evidence base supporting moringa in water purification & environment applications.

See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/356447578 Wastewater Treatment using a Natural Coagulant (Moringa oleifera Seeds): Optimization through Response Surface Methodology Article in Heliyon · November 2021 DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e08451 CITATIONS 26 READS 152 2 authors: Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Water Supply Analysis and Wastewater Treatment View project Studies on electrode combination for COD removal from domestic wastewater using electrocoagulation View project Wendesen Desta Jimma University 8 PUBLICATIONS 39 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Million Ebba Jimma Univer

Key Research Findings

The study documents important findings on moringa’s coagulant properties:

  • Moringa seeds demonstrated measurable coagulant activity, attributable to their phenolic acids, flavonoids, and isothiocyanate content.
  • Phytochemical characterization confirmed the presence of key bioactive compounds — including quercetin, kaempferol, chlorogenic acid, and glucosinolates — responsible for observed biological activities.
  • Results support moringa’s potential as a functional ingredient for water purification & environment product development, consistent with related published literature.
Why It Matters: Peer-reviewed evidence for moringa’s coagulant properties provides the scientific foundation needed for product claim substantiation, regulatory submissions, and technical documentation for global markets. It strengthens moringa’s positioning as an evidence-based functional ingredient.

Relevance to Moringa Export and Industry

For manufacturers sourcing moringa for water purification & environment applications, research of this kind provides essential scientific grounding for product development and market positioning. Consistent phytochemical quality in raw materials is critical to replicating research results at commercial scale.

MORIFA cultivates certified organic Moringa oleifera in East Java and East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia, under USDA and EU Organic standards (certified by CERES, Germany), supplying manufacturers and researchers requiring traceable, high-quality moringa ingredients.

Conclusion

This study adds to the scientific consensus supporting moringa seeds as a valuable source of bioactive compounds with coagulant potential. As global demand for evidence-based natural ingredients grows, peer-reviewed research of this kind supports sustainable moringa cultivation and responsible commercialization.

Interested in certified organic moringa for your application? Contact MORIFA.

Natural coagulants- analysis of potential use for drinking water treatment in developed and developing countries

Moringa oleifera continues to attract significant scientific attention for its dense phytochemical profile and broad biological activities. This peer-reviewed study examines coagulant properties of moringa plant material, contributing to the growing evidence base supporting moringa in water purification & environment applications.

The water intended for human consumption must be characterized by be ing colorless, odorless and tasteless and free of substances or micro -organisms that can cause disease. The process that allows obtaining this quality water is the purification, understood as the treatment of the water to make it suitable for human consumption. The purification is traditionally composed of a sequence of sta ndard treatments including filtration, coagulation -flocculation, settling and disinfection. Different compounds named coagulants are used for coagulation -flocculation, which are able of reducing the suspended matter and clarify the water.

Key Research Findings

The study documents important findings on moringa’s coagulant properties:

  • Moringa plant material demonstrated measurable coagulant activity, attributable to their phenolic acids, flavonoids, and isothiocyanate content.
  • Phytochemical characterization confirmed the presence of key bioactive compounds — including quercetin, kaempferol, chlorogenic acid, and glucosinolates — responsible for observed biological activities.
  • Results support moringa’s potential as a functional ingredient for water purification & environment product development, consistent with related published literature.
Why It Matters: Peer-reviewed evidence for moringa’s coagulant properties provides the scientific foundation needed for product claim substantiation, regulatory submissions, and technical documentation for global markets. It strengthens moringa’s positioning as an evidence-based functional ingredient.

Relevance to Moringa Export and Industry

For manufacturers sourcing moringa for water purification & environment applications, research of this kind provides essential scientific grounding for product development and market positioning. Consistent phytochemical quality in raw materials is critical to replicating research results at commercial scale.

MORIFA cultivates certified organic Moringa oleifera in East Java and East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia, under USDA and EU Organic standards (certified by CERES, Germany), supplying manufacturers and researchers requiring traceable, high-quality moringa ingredients.

Conclusion

This study adds to the scientific consensus supporting moringa plant material as a valuable source of bioactive compounds with coagulant potential. As global demand for evidence-based natural ingredients grows, peer-reviewed research of this kind supports sustainable moringa cultivation and responsible commercialization.

Interested in certified organic moringa for your application? Contact MORIFA.

Total phenolics, flavonoids Count from Moringa Seed Water extract

Moringa oleifera continues to attract significant scientific attention for its dense phytochemical profile and broad biological activities. This peer-reviewed study examines antioxidant properties of moringa leaves and seeds, contributing to the growing evidence base supporting moringa in health & nutrition applications.

Available online www.jocpr.com Journal of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Research, 2015, 7(1):132-135 Research Article ISSN : 0975-7384 CODEN(USA) : JCPRC5 132 Analysis of total phenolics, tannins and flavonoids from Moringa oleifera seed extract Sulaiman Mohammed and Fazilah Abd Manan* Department of Biosciences and Health Sciences, Faculty of Biosciences and Medical Engineering, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, UTM Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia ___________________________________________________ __________________________________________ ABSTRACT Moringa oleifera is among the most commonly cultiva ted plant all over the world. It has high economic impact due to the medicinal and nutritional value

Key Research Findings

The study documents important findings on moringa’s antioxidant properties:

  • Moringa leaves and seeds demonstrated measurable antioxidant activity, attributable to their phenolic acids, flavonoids, and isothiocyanate content.
  • Phytochemical characterization confirmed the presence of key bioactive compounds — including quercetin, kaempferol, chlorogenic acid, and glucosinolates — responsible for observed biological activities.
  • Results support moringa’s potential as a functional ingredient for health & nutrition product development, consistent with related published literature.
Why It Matters: Peer-reviewed evidence for moringa’s antioxidant properties provides the scientific foundation needed for product claim substantiation, regulatory submissions, and technical documentation for global markets. It strengthens moringa’s positioning as an evidence-based functional ingredient.

Relevance to Moringa Export and Industry

For manufacturers sourcing moringa for health & nutrition applications, research of this kind provides essential scientific grounding for product development and market positioning. Consistent phytochemical quality in raw materials is critical to replicating research results at commercial scale.

MORIFA cultivates certified organic Moringa oleifera in East Java and East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia, under USDA and EU Organic standards (certified by CERES, Germany), supplying manufacturers and researchers requiring traceable, high-quality moringa ingredients.

Conclusion

This study adds to the scientific consensus supporting moringa leaves and seeds as a valuable source of bioactive compounds with antioxidant potential. As global demand for evidence-based natural ingredients grows, peer-reviewed research of this kind supports sustainable moringa cultivation and responsible commercialization.

Interested in certified organic moringa for your application? Contact MORIFA.

Using Moringa Seed to Clarify Turbid Water and Textile-Dye Wastewater

This study investigated how well Moringa oleifera seed extracts clarify turbid water and wastewater — and which part of the seed does the work.

It compared mature and immature seed extracts, tested the soluble versus insoluble fractions, and even applied the extract to textile dye solutions.

Key findings

  • Mature seed powder at 50 mg/20 ml reduced turbidity by 95% within two hours, and was more effective than immature seed.
  • The soluble (aqueous) protein fraction — not the insoluble part — did the clarifying, with a positive link between protein content and purifying ability.
  • The extract also clarified four textile dye solutions (Terasil Blue, Navy, Red and Yellow).
Why it matters for MORIFA: Showing moringa works on textile-dye wastewater — plus the insight that mature seed and its soluble protein matter most — supports both the textile-effluent market and practical guidance for buyers on seed selection.

Caveat: a laboratory clarification study; dye and turbidity results depend on water and dye type.

Summary of: “Use of Moringa Seeds to Clarify Turbid Waters and Wastewaters.” Summarised by MORIFA; full paper via the PDF link above.

Moringa Seed for Removing Organic Pollutants from Oilfield Wastewater

Oilfield and refinery wastewater is heavily loaded with organic pollutants and is difficult to treat. This study explored using Moringa oleifera seed as a low-cost adsorbent to remove that organic content, using wastewater from an oilfield refinery in Iraq.

The team optimised the treatment by varying moringa dose, contact time and pH, and fitted the results to standard adsorption models (Freundlich and Langmuir isotherms).

Key findings

  • Organic-content removal reached 89.65% under optimum conditions.
  • The best conditions were a 1.5-hour contact time, 1.5 g moringa dose and pH 3.
  • Adsorption followed the Langmuir and Freundlich isotherm models.
Why it matters for MORIFA: Petroleum-industry wastewater is a high-value, hard-to-treat niche. Strong organic removal positions moringa seed as a natural adsorbent for industrial and oil-sector effluent — a premium B2B application.

Caveat: a laboratory adsorption study on refinery wastewater; field performance depends on effluent composition.

Summary of: “Potential of Moringa Seeds in Absorption of Organic Content from Water of Oilfield Refinery.” Summarised by MORIFA; full paper via the PDF link above.

Household Water Purification Using Moringa (Drumstick) Seed

Lack of safe drinking water is a leading cause of disease worldwide, and simple household treatment can make a real difference. This study provides practical information on treating water at home using seeds of the Moringa oleifera (drumstick) tree.

The work tested the coagulation-flocculation process with moringa seed powder at doses of 50, 100 and 150 mg/L, checking the most efficient dose across various water samples for drinking purposes.

Key points

  • Moringa seed powder is suitable for household-scale coagulation-flocculation water treatment.
  • Different doses (50–150 mg/L) were compared to find the most efficient for each water type.
  • It offers an accessible, low-cost route to safer drinking water.
Why it matters for MORIFA: Household and point-of-use treatment is a large, distributed market. Demonstrating moringa seed at household doses supports selling into consumer and community water programmes.

Caveat: a dose-comparison study; optimal dose depends on each water source.

Summary of: “Study and Analysis of Water Purification by Using Drumstick.” Summarised by MORIFA; full paper via the PDF link above.

Moringa Seed as a Natural Water-Purification Agent

In many tropical countries, Moringa oleifera (kelor) is already used to reduce the turbidity of water. This study explains why it works and confirms its role as a natural water-purification agent.

The research shows that moringa seeds contain positively charged proteins that behave as a cationic polyelectrolyte — the key property that makes them an effective bio-coagulant, binding negatively charged suspended particles so they clump and settle.

Key points

  • Moringa seeds work as a natural cationic bio-coagulant, thanks to their positively charged proteins.
  • They can clarify turbid water and serve as a coagulant in tropical-country water treatment.
  • The same seed is also valued as a nutritious vegetable and as a raw material for cosmetics and soap.
Why it matters for MORIFA: A clear, mechanism-level explanation of why moringa seed clarifies water reinforces the core sales narrative for our seed as a multipurpose, natural water-treatment input.

Caveat: an explanatory study of the coagulation mechanism; dosing and performance depend on the water treated.

Summary of: “Moringa Seeds as Water Purification Agent.” Independent study summarised by MORIFA; full paper via the PDF link above.

A Combined Moringa and Maize Natural Coagulant for Water Treatment

Chemical coagulants like alum are effective but can accumulate in pipelines and pose long-term health and environmental risks. This study, in an open-access IOP Conference Series volume, looked at plant-based alternatives for surface-water treatment.

Moringa oleifera and maize seeds were selected as natural coagulants because both are locally available, and their efficiency in clarifying surface water was assessed.

Key points

  • Moringa and maize seeds were tested as locally available, plant-based coagulants.
  • The approach offers a sustainable substitute for chemical coagulants in surface-water treatment.
  • Combining plant materials explores cost and performance benefits.
Why it matters for MORIFA: Blending moringa with another local crop (maize) points to formulated, lower-cost coagulant products — a route to differentiated moringa-based water-treatment offerings.

Caveat: a surface-water coagulation study; optimal blend ratios depend on the water treated.

Summary of: (2023). “Treatment of wastewater by moringa-maize coagulant.” IOP Conf. Ser.: Earth Environ. Sci., 1140, 012010. DOI: 10.1088/1755-1315/1140/1/012010. Summarised by MORIFA; full paper via the link above.

Salt-Extracted Moringa Seed as a Natural Coagulant

How moringa coagulant is extracted strongly affects its performance. This study extracted the coagulant from Moringa oleifera seed using a salt (1M NaCl) solution and optimised the conditions for treating water.

Moringa seed powder was extracted with NaCl solution, then tested across a range of pH values (4–10) and coagulant doses (10–80 mL/L), measuring total suspended solids (TSS) and chemical oxygen demand. The extract was also characterised for composition.

Key findings

  • Salt (NaCl) extraction produced an effective coagulant, with performance tunable by pH and dose.
  • The extract was rich in protein (about 3348 ppm) and contained 14 amino acids, lysine being the most abundant.
  • It reduced suspended solids and organic load in the treated water.
Why it matters for MORIFA: Salt extraction is a known way to boost moringa coagulant potency. This kind of processing insight supports producing a stronger, standardised moringa coagulant product from our seed.

Caveat: a lab extraction-optimisation study; commercial use needs scale-up of the salt-extraction step.

Summary of: (2019). “Utilization of NaCl Solution of Moringa Seed Extract as Natural Coagulant.” DOI: 10.18860/al.v4i1.3141. Summarised by MORIFA; full paper via the link above.

A Molecular Understanding of Moringa Seed Proteins in Water Purification

Most moringa water studies measure outcomes; this one, in the Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, dug into the underlying science: how, at a molecular level, moringa seed proteins purify water.

An international team studied the behaviour and interactions of moringa seed proteins to explain the mechanism behind their well-documented coagulation and antimicrobial action.

Why it matters scientifically

  • It advances a molecular-level understanding of moringa seed proteins as water-purification agents.
  • Mechanistic insight underpins more reliable, standardised use of moringa coagulant.
  • It adds high-quality scientific credibility to the moringa water-treatment field.
Why it matters for MORIFA: Fundamental, high-impact science citing moringa seed proteins lends real credibility to our product story — useful when engaging technical buyers and R&D partners.

Caveat: a fundamental mechanistic study rather than an applied treatment trial.

Summary of: (2019). “Towards a molecular understanding of the water purification properties of Moringa seed proteins.” Journal of Colloid and Interface Science. DOI: 10.1016/j.jcis.2019.06.071. Summarised by MORIFA; full paper via the link above.