Yam flour was modified by radio frequency explosion puffing at different moisture content, puffing temperature, and puffing pressure difference. After puffing, the protein content and lipid content increased by 0.56-1.28 % and 0.23-0.39 %, respectively. Puffing caused the flour granules to aggregate, increasing the thermal transition temperatures and reducing the pasting viscosities, enthalpy, 1047/1022 cm ratio, and relative crystallinity. Puffing reduced the intensity of the infrared spectrum peak at 1641 cm by breaking the hydrogen bonds without changing A-type crystalline structure. Puffing promoted the conversion of random-coil and α-helix protein structure to β-turn and β-sheet. Puffing retarded in vitro digestibility by reducing rapidly digestible starch content by 7.04-11.12 % and rising slowly digestible starch content and resistant starch content by 4.02-4.89 % and 2.77-3.10 %, respectively. Radio frequency explosion puffing altered flour's physicochemical, functional and digestibility properties by destroying the protein structure and promoting the interaction of starch and proteins/lipids.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2023.137925DOI Listing

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