Presence and dehydration of ikaite, calcium carbonate hexahydrate, in frozen shrimp shell.

J Agric Food Chem

Department of Dairy and Food Science, The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Rolighedsvej 30, DK-1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark.

Published: March 1999

Ikaite, calcium carbonate hexahydrate, has by means of X-ray diffraction analyses of frozen samples been identified as the mineral component of the white spots formed in the shell of frozen shrimp during storage. When the shrimp thaw and the shell material is dried and kept at room temperature, ikaite rapidly transforms into a mixture of anhydrous calcium carbonate forms. X-ray diffraction analyses and Raman spectra of synthetic ikaite as well as the dehydration product confirm the assignments, and the rate constant for dehydration is approximately 7 x 10(-)(4) s(-)(1) at ambient temperature. Differential scanning calorimetry showed that dehydration of synthetic ikaite is an entropy-driven, athermal process and confirms that a single first-order reaction is rate-determining. Ikaite is found to be stable in aqueous solution at temperatures below 5 degrees C and in the shell of frozen shrimps but decomposes on thawing to form anhydrous calcium carbonates.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf980932aDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

calcium carbonate
12
ikaite calcium
8
carbonate hexahydrate
8
frozen shrimp
8
x-ray diffraction
8
diffraction analyses
8
shell frozen
8
anhydrous calcium
8
synthetic ikaite
8
ikaite
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!