Publication | Closed Access
Thermal degradation and stability of starch under different processing conditions
332
Citations
88
References
2012
Year
Food ChemistryStarches ModificationsChemical EngineeringEngineeringEnvironmental EngineeringBiochemical EngineeringBiotechnologyHigh Amylose StarchPolysaccharideFood EngineeringFood ProcessingThermal ProcessingNon-thermal Food Processing TechnologiesThermal DegradationFood TechnologyHealth Sciences
Advances in polymer science have deepened understanding of natural polymer degradation, especially for starch. This review aims to examine the thermal degradation and stability of starch and starch‑based materials, considering composition, modifications, and processing environments. The authors synthesize findings from detection techniques, amylose/amylopectin effects, and open versus sealed, shearless versus shear stress conditions. In open systems, starch decomposition temperature increases with amylopectin content and is independent of initial water content; in sealed systems, two degradation steps occur—the first shifts to higher temperatures with more amylopectin, the second is unaffected by composition but lowered by moisture—and shear stress preferentially degrades amylopectin while amylose resists.
Abstract The objectives of this paper are to review the thermal degradation and stability of starch and starch‐based materials, including both fundamental sciences such as detecting techniques, the effect of amylose/amylopectin content in starches and starches modifications, as well as the effect of different processing environments, such as an open or sealed system, and shearless or shear stress conditions. The decomposition temperature of starches was increased with increasing amylopectin content in an open system. In the open system, the initial water content did not affect the decomposition temperature because all water had evaporated from samples prior to reaching the decomposition temperature. Two decomposition temperatures were observed in the sealed system: the first at lower temperature represents long chain scission; and the second at higher temperature involves decomposition of glucose ring. In the sealed system, the first degradation was increased with increasing amylopectin content. There is no observable difference of the second degradation for the samples containing different amylose/amylopectin ratios. The higher the moisture content is, the lower the second decomposition temperature is detected in the sealed system. Significant shear degradation was observed in amylopectin component of starch, while high amylose starch proved less sensitive to shear stress. The achievements in this area have increased the knowledge of polymer science, in particular to understand the degradation of natural polymers.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1