Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
225391 Journal of Food Engineering 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Maize starch–water suspensions (1.0%) were subjected to single-pass high-pressure homogenization treatment at 60 MPa, 100 MPa, and 140 MPa. The structure and thermal properties of the high-pressure homogenized starches were investigated using DSC, X-ray diffraction technique, laser scattering, and microscope, with native maize starch (suspended in water, but not homogenized) as a control sample. DSC analysis showed a decrease in gelatinization temperatures (To, Tp) and gelatinization enthalpy (ΔHgel) with increasing homogenizing pressure. No noticeable effect of high-pressure homogenization on the retrogradation of maize starch was observed. Laser scattering measurements of particle size demonstrated an increase in the granule size at a homogenizing pressure of 140 MPa. This was attributed to the gelatinization and aggregation of the starch granules. X-ray diffraction patterns showed that there was an evident loss of crystallinity after homogenization at 140 MPa. Microscopy studies showed that the maize starch was partly gelatinized after high-pressure homogenization, and the gelatinized granules were prone to aggregate with each other, resulting in an increase of granule size.

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