Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7788667 | Carbohydrate Polymers | 2015 | 49 Pages |
Abstract
The influence of sodium alginate (SA) on soy protein isolate (SPI)-based co-blending system gelling properties was studied under thermodynamic compatibility and incompatibility conditions using a direct addition (SPI/SA) or co-drying (SPI/SA-CO) process. For an SPI/SA (30:1) or SPI/SA-CO (30:1) system, the addition of too little SA did not significantly modify the SPI, and the gelation temperature (Tgel) and storage modulus (Gâ²) were similar to an SPI solution alone. For SPI/SA (20:1) and SPI/SA-CO (10:1), the Tgel and Gâ² were between the values for solutions of SPI or SA alone; however, SPI/SA-CO (20:1) and SPI/SA-CO (10:1) gels could nearly double the equilibrium value of Gâ² (Geqâ²), thus improving the barrier and mechanical properties of the final formed films. The cryo-transmission electron microscope morphology of the SPI/SA-CO (20:1) and SPI/SA-CO (10:1) systems after heating was of the core-shell type in which the core comprised SPI gel.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Organic Chemistry
Authors
Hongyang Pan, Xueming Xu, Yaoqi Tian, Aiquan Jiao, Bo Jiang, Jie Chen, Zhengyu Jin,