Publications by authors named "My Dieu Do"

Epoxidized soybean oil (ESO) was applied as an additive for wheat gluten (WG) to modify the properties of the renewable and biodegradable natural polymer materials. Optimum intermolecular interactions and crosslinking between ESO chains and the WG matrix were achieved under alkaline conditions. The WGESO materials were heterogeneous on a scale of 20-30 nm, but the homogeneity was improved upon increasing the amount of glycerol as a plasticizer in the materials.

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Chemical modification of gelatin by a natural phenolic compound tannic acid (TA) at pH 8 was studied, and the properties of the modified gelatin materials were examined. The cross-linking effect was predominant when the TA content was lower, resulting in the formation of a partially insoluble cross-link network. The cross-linking structure was stable even under boiling, and the protein matrix became rigid, whereas the mechanical properties were enhanced.

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Cross-linking gelatin with natural phenolic compound caffeic acid (CA) or tannic acid (TA) above pH 9 resulted in formation of insoluble hydrogels. The cross-linking reactivity was controlled by variation of pH, the concentration of the gelatin solution, or the amount of CA or TA used in the reaction. The cross-linking chemistry was studied by high-resolution NMR technique in both solution and solid state via investigation on small molecular model systems or using (13)C enriched caffeic acid (LCA) in the reaction with gelatin.

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Efficient plasticization and sufficient crosslinking were achieved by using an acetone-formaldehyde (AF) resin as an additive in the thermal processing of wheat protein-based natural polymers. The mobile AF resin and its strong intermolecular interactions with a wheat protein matrix produced sufficient flexibility for the plastics, while the covalent bonds formed between AF and the protein chains also caused the water-soluble resin to be retained in the materials under wet conditions. The mechanical properties of the materials were also enhanced as an additional benefit due to the formation of crosslinked networks through the polymer matrix.

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The mechanical performance of plasticized wheat gluten (WG) materials was significantly modified through the formation of different chemical and network structures with alkoxysilanes. The epoxy-functionalized alkoxysilanes were grafted to segments of WG, and then the condensation reactions between alkoxysilane segments occurred during thermal processing to form WG-siloxane networks. The mechanical properties and molecular motions of the networks were dependent on the amount and type of alkoxysilanes applied.

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A series of wheat-gluten-based nanocomposites were produced by dispersing Cloisite-30B nanoclay particles into plasticized wheat gluten systems under thermal processing conditions. The exfoliation of the nanoparticles as confirmed by wide-angle X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy has resulted in significant enhancement of the mechanical properties for both deamidated proteins and vital gluten systems under 50% relative humidity (RH). Such strength improvement was also pronounced for wheat gluten (WG) systems under a high humidity condition (RH = 85%).

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Chemical modification of wheat protein-based natural polymer materials was conducted using glyoxal as cross-linker, and the cross-linking effect was studied on mechanical properties under different humidity conditions, the molecular motions of each component, and the phase structures/components of the whole materials. The cross-linking significantly enhanced the mechanical strength of wheat gluten (WG) materials under RH = 50%. The elongation of materials was also increased, which was in contrast to many cross-linked protein systems.

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The mechanical properties, phase composition, and molecular motions of thermally processed wheat gluten- (WG-) based natural polymer materials were studied by mechanical testing, dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), and solid-state NMR spectroscopy. The performance of the materials was mainly determined by the denaturization and cross-linking occurring in the thermal processing and the nature or amount of plasticizers used. The pH effect also played an important role in the materials when water was used as the only plasticizer (WG-w).

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The intermolecular interactions and phase structures of thermally processed wheat proteins with glycerol and water as plasticizers were studied by dynamic mechanical analysis and solid-state high-resolution NMR spectroscopy. The results of phase structures at scales of molecular level to tens of nanometers were correlated with the mechanical properties of the materials. The strong hydrogen bonding intermolecular interactions between the components in wheat proteins and the plasticizers resulted in a significant change in molecular motions of wheat protein materials.

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