Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders

Charfedinne Ayed, Filippo Bramante, Ogueri Nwaiwu, William MacNaughtan, Serafim Bakalis, Timothy J. Foster*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)
12 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Many Industrial food-related processes involve the hydration of powders. The penetration of water in both liquid and vapour forms into carbohydrate powders has been studied using the techniques of low-field Time Domain NMR, Dynamic Vapour Sorption, and optical microscopy. A simplified model of water penetration into powders has been produced, principally derived from NMR measurements. No-mixing, mixing and overmixing conditions were studied. There was concurrently a progressive association of solids with the liquid (not necessarily solubilisation) and hydration behaviour approximated by 2 relaxation components in the case of potato flake and 3 components in the case of pre-gelatinised starch. Microscopic evidence is consistent with this behaviour, and the maintenance of structure in potato flake was evident in contrast to the complete dissolution of pre-gelatinised starch. Vapour rather than water sorption removes any capillarity/water meniscus effect and both pre-gelatinised starch and potato flake showed different levels of surface adsorption and penetration behaviour but with the same time course.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100007
JournalCarbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications
Volume1
Number of pages11
ISSN2666-8939
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Keywords

  • Powder hydration
  • Carbohydrate
  • Mixing
  • Low-resolution NMR
  • DVS
  • Microscopy
  • Pre-gelatinised starch
  • Potato flake

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