4.7 Article

Formulation and Evaluation of Chitosan/NaCl/Maltodextrin Microparticles as a Saltiness Enhancer: Study on the Optimization of Excipients for the Spray-Drying Process

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13244302

Keywords

chitosan; spray drying; crystalline carbohydrates; hygroscopicity; saltiness perception; sodium reduction

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (Taiwan) [MOST 106-2320-B-019-002-MY3, 109-2320-B-019-006, 110-2320-B-019-005]

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This study introduced different excipients to improve the spray drying process of chitosan/NaCl/maltodextrin microparticles, resulting in spherical particles with sizes ranging from 6.29 to 7.64 μm. The addition of microcrystalline cellulose and waxy starch significantly reduced hygroscopicity and caking strength, showing potential for reducing sodium intake in the food industry.
Spray-dried chitosan/NaCl/maltodextrin microparticles have the potential to be used to enhance saltiness; however, its notable hygroscopicity results in handling and storage problems, thus limiting its application. In the present study, we attempted to introduce maltodextrin, microcrystalline cellulose (MCC), and waxy starch (WS) as excipients into the spray drying formulation of microparticles to reduce the cohesiveness and caking behavior and improve the yield simultaneously by ameliorating the moisture absorption tendency. The prepared microparticles showed a spherical appearance and had particle sizes ranging from 6.29 to 7.64 mu m, while the sizes of the NaCl crystals embedded in the microparticles were 0.36 to 1.24 mu m. The crystalline reflections of WS and MCC were retained in the microparticles after the spray-drying process. The handling properties were assessed to be acceptable. The formulation with only maltodextrin as the excipient showed a high moisture absorption rate of 2.83 g/100 g center dot h and a caking strength of 3.27 kg. The addition of MCC and WS significantly reduced the hygroscopic rate and caking strength. The spray-dried products provided better saltiness perception than native NaCl; as such, they may be promising for seasoning dry food products to achieve sodium intake reduction in the food industry.

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