Atmospheric pressure pin-to-plate cold plasma effect on physicochemical, functional, pasting, thermal, and structural characteristics of proso-millet starch.

Food Res Int

Department of Food Engineering Technology, Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai, India; Institute of Chemical Technology, Marathwada Campus, Jalna, India. Electronic address:

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how atmospheric pressure pin-to-plate cold plasma affects various characteristics of starch, such as pH, moisture, and amylose content, under specific voltage and time conditions.
  • Cold plasma treatment improved water and oil binding capacities, solubility, and swelling power of starch, while also leading to a reduction in amylose content, thus enhancing paste clarity during storage.
  • Additionally, although cold plasma increased the relative crystallinity of starch, it resulted in lower paste viscosity, producing a more soluble and stable starch without compromising its fundamental structure.

Article Abstract

The present work aimed to study the influence of atmospheric pressure pin-to-plate cold plasma on the physicochemical (pH, moisture, and amylose content), functional (water & oil binding capacity, solubility & swelling power, paste clarity on storage, pasting), powder flow, thermal and structural (FTIR, XRD, and SEM) characteristics at an input voltage of 170-230 V for 5-15 min. The starch surface modification by cold plasma was seen in the SEM images which cause the surge in WBC (1.54 g/g to 1.93 g/g), OBC (2.22 g/g to 2.79 g/g), solubility (3.05-5.38% at 70 °C; 37.11-52.98% at 90 °C) and swelling power (5.39-7.83% at 70 °C; 25.67-35.33% at 90 °C) of starch. Reduction in the amylose content (27.82% to 25.07%) via plasma-induced depolymerization resists the retrogradation tendency, thereby increasing the paste clarity (up to ̴ 39%) during the 5 days of refrigerated storage. However, the paste viscosity is reduced after cold plasma treatment yielding low-strength starch pastes. The relative crystallinity of starch increased (37.35% to 45.36%) by the plasma-induced fragmented starch granules which would aggregate and broaden the gelatinization temperature, but these starch fragments reduced the gelatinization enthalpy. The fundamental starch structure is conserved as seen in FTIR spectra. Thus, cold plasma aids in the production of soluble, low-viscous, stable, and clear paste-forming depolymerized proso-millet starch.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2023.113444DOI Listing

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