To test whether the extent of physical aging affected the reaction rate, Maillard reaction kinetics were studied in glassy model preservation systems subjected to two different thermal histories. The glass transition temperature and physical aging of the matrix were determined using differential scanning calorimetry, and the normalized heat capacities were modeled using the Tool-Narayanaswamy-Moynihan approach. Samples prepared using the different thermal histories initially had different degrees of aging, but these were practically indistinguishable after 10 h under the reaction conditions (65 degrees C); the samples underwent rapid structural relaxation at that temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe physical aging of low water content, amorphous starch/water, maltodextrin/water, and maltose/water mixtures in the glassy state was examined using mechanical testing and calorimetry. Stress relaxation measurements showed that upon storage of the glassy materials there was a time-dependent increase in both flexural modulus and mechanical relaxation time. The mechanical relaxation time increased with depth of quench below the calorimetric glass transition temperature and with aging time at the quench temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe deposition of alternating layers of pectin and chitosan at a solid surface was studied using surface plasmon resonance. The binding of biopolymer to the surface was irreversible over the time scales examined. The deposition was dependent on the flow rate through the measurement cell with mass transport limitation at lower flow rates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConcentrated solutions of bovine beta-lactoglobulin were studied using osmotic stress and rheological techniques. At pH 6.0 and 8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe saturated oxygen concentration in a series of aqueous solutions of sorbitol (up to 35% w/w) and maltitol (up to 50% w/w) was measured using colorimetric reagent vials based on Rhodazine D. The results indicate that the solubility of oxygen in low-water carbohydrates is considerably lower than its solubility in pure water. It was concluded that the low-oxygen solubility is a major factor contributing to the barrier properties of low-water content carbohydrates used in the encapsulation of flavours, lipids, peptides and other oxidisable species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe solubility and dissolution behaviour of A- and B-type crystals of short chain amylose were measured both directly and using differential scanning calorimetry in the temperature range 30-110 degrees C. Dissolution in the calorimeter was affected by super-heating to the extent of 24-28 degrees C. Following trends previously found by calorimetry the B-type crystal polymorph was more soluble than the A-type.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of chitosan concentration on the gelation of pectins differing in charge density and distribution was examined, through the determination of gel stiffness and the binding of chitosan to the gel network. Chitosan acts as a crosslinker of concentrated pectin solutions, with its effectiveness showing a dependency on charge on the pectin. The networks produced are clear even under conditions of charge neutralisation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have examined the mechanical behaviour of different types of pectin at high concentrations (> 30% w/w), relevant to the behaviour of pectin in the plant cell wall, and as a film-forming agent. Mechanical properties were examined as a function of counterion type (K(+), Ca(2+), Mg(2+)), concentration and extent of hydration. Hydration was controlled in an osmotic stress experiment where pectin films were exposed to concentrated polyethylene glycol [PEG] solutions of known osmotic pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of poly-L-lysine concentration and degree of polymerisation on the gelation of pectins differing in charge density and distribution was examined, through the determination of gel stiffness, swelling behaviour and the binding of poly-L-lysine to the gel network. Poly-L-lysine acts as a crosslinker of concentrated pectin solutions, with its effectiveness showing dependencies on pH and charge distribution on the pectin. Neutralisation of the anionic charge on the pectin with the polycationic peptide leads to gel opacity and eventually network collapse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe densities of amorphous maltose-water, maltose-glycerol and starch-sorbitol-water mixtures were measured using a vibrating-tube density meter and pycnometry. The volumetric change on mixing was investigated through the calculation of the quantity DeltaV/V, the difference between (experimental) volume of the mixture and the linear composition weighted pure constituent volumes (ideal mixing). For all of the systems studied the quantity DeltaV/V was negative and approached a minimum of -0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe glass-like transition behavior of concentrated aqueous solutions of bovine serum albumin was examined using rheological techniques. At mass fractions >0.4, there was a marked concentration dependence of viscosity with a glass-like kinetic arrest observed at mass fractions in the region of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of carbohydrate structure on the conductivity of low water content amorphous carbohydrate-water, and carbohydrate-water-KCl mixtures, has been measured using both direct current and alternating current techniques at temperatures in the supercooled liquid and glassy range, ranging from -40 to 80 degrees C. The structures included homologous mono-, di- and trisaccharides (glucose, maltose and maltotriose), a monosaccharide with no exocyclic hydroxymethyl group (xylose) and a second trisaccharide (raffinose). The KCl-mixtures contained 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structural relaxation during the ageing of an amorphous maltose and a starch-sorbitol mixture was examined using a range of physical techniques. Heat capacity, measured by differential scanning calorimetry, showed an overshoot in the glass-transition region, the size of which was temperature and time dependent. Volume relaxation measurements were made at different ageing temperatures in the range T(g) -15 to -30 K.
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