Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
222626 Journal of Food Engineering 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Dry fractionation enriches dietary fibre (DF) from defatted rice bran up to 68%dm.•DF fraction from electrostatic separation contains smaller particles.•Water retention capacity of dry-fractionated DF is similar to wet-extracted DF.•Dry-fractionated DF has similar oil binding capacity compared to wet-extracted DF.

Defatted rice bran is excellent source of dietary fibre. The mostly used lab-scale method to extract dietary fibre is not very efficient; dry fractionation is a more energy efficient alternative at larger scale. Three separation routes were studied: two-step electrostatic separation, sieving and a combination of electrostatic separation and sieving. All yielded fibre-enriched fractions with similar yield (20–21%) and purity (67–68% dm), which recovered 42–48% of the fibre from original rice bran flour. The enriched fraction obtained by two-step electrostatic separation contained more small particles and possibly different DF composition compared to the other two, which resulted in different functional properties. Compared to dietary fibre extracted by enzymatic-gravimetric method, enriched fractions by dry fractionation have a similar water retention capacity and oil bind capacity. This suggests that fibre-enriched fractions by dry fractionation can be applied in foods and provide similar technological and physiological properties as wet-extracted dietary fibre does.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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