Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6664437 | Journal of Food Engineering | 2018 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
Lubricated squeezing flow (LSF) experiments on wheat flour dough were conducted at a constant biaxial extensional rate followed by relaxation experiments. The effect of temperature on the rheology of the dough was studied in the range 25-95â¯Â°C under small and large strain to characterize changes in the dough through a possible pathway to simulate the dough-crumb transition during the first step of the baking process. A strain hardening effect was shown over the whole temperature range. Like extensional viscosity measured at 0.1 and 0.65 biaxial strain, the consistency index (K) decreased from 25â¯Â°C to 45â¯Â°C and increased at temperatures above 50â¯Â°C. Two levels of the behaviour index (n) were found: 0.35-0.40 below 45â¯Â°C, and 0.1-0.2 above 45â¯Â°C. The relaxation degree also changed dramatically but only at higher temperatures (56-60â¯Â°C), below which it remained almost constant (98-99%), once the dough became a viscoelastic liquid, above this temperature the main physical-chemical reactions (starch and protein) started to occur, leading to more solid properties. These results complement those of LSF. LSF experiments at large biaxial strain (0.75), combined with a relaxation experiment, were successfully used for dough/crumb characterisation at a temperatures ranging from 25â¯Â°C to 74â¯Â°C. Alpha values estimated from Launay's model were incorporated in the flow behaviour index, underwent the same type of changes as a function of temperature as n but with a less marked transition; n was divided by two and K increased by about one decade.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
F.M. Vanin, T. Lucas, G. Trystram, C. Michon,