Publications by authors named "A Buleon"

Lignocellulosic materials from municipal solid waste emerge as attractive resources for anaerobic digestion biorefinery. To increase the knowledge required for establishing efficient bioprocesses, dynamics of batch fermentation by the cellulolytic bacterium Ruminiclostridium cellulolyticum were compared using three cellulosic materials, paper handkerchief, cotton discs and Whatman filter paper. Fermentation of paper handkerchief occurred the fastest and resulted in a specific metabolic profile: it resulted in the lowest acetate-to-lactate and acetate-to-ethanol ratios.

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The changes in physicochemical properties of standard maize starch (SMS) by three hydrothermal treatments; DV-HMT (Direct Vapor-Heat Moisture Treatment), RP-HMT (Reduced Pressurized-Heat Moisture Treatment) and DIC (instantaneous controlled pressure drop) were investigated at different processing conditions; steam pressure (SP) varied from 1 to 3bar during 20min. Starch was steamed by direct contact, whose interest was to intensify the heat transfer phenomenon but also the water transfer. The physicochemical changes of SMS depended on process conditions and their extent followed this order: DIC>RP-HMT>DV-HMT.

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In this paper, a detailed characterization of the mechanisms at the origin of the shape-memory effect in amorphous potato starch is presented. Using different treatments (annealing) and preparation methods (hot casting and extrusion), the local structures responsible for the shape-memory were disrupted, as evidenced in the first part of the article detailing the macroscopic properties: mechanical, calorimetric and shape-memory. In the second part the macromolecular scale is investigated using X-rays diffraction and CP-MAS NMR, and thus allows making the link between the structural differences and the macroscopic properties.

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The many studies about amylolysis have collected considerable information regarding the contribution of the starch physico-chemical properties. But the inherent elaborate and variable structure of granular starch and, consequently, the multifactorial condition of the system hinders the interpretation of the experimental results. The immediate benefit of multivariate statistical analysis approaches with that regard is twofold: considering the factors, possibly interrelated, all together and not independently, providing a first estimation of the magnitude and confidence level of the relations between factors and amylolysis kinetic parameters.

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Two empirical models, a conventional first-order kinetics and a fractal-like first-order kinetic model were tested for analysing the hydrolysis of 13 wild type, single and double mutants of maize starch by porcine pancreatic α-amylase (PPA). The major difference between the two models is an additional parameter, the fractal kinetics exponent h, which enables to characterise a decrease of the reaction rate coefficient over time. The fractal-like kinetic model should be preferred to characterise the amylolysis for 10 mutants out of 13 as sugary-2 and amylose-extender curves exhibit clear reaction rate retardation, unlike normal maize and waxy maize.

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