4.6 Article

Vigna subterranea (L.) Verdc Starch-Soluble Dietary Fibre Potential Nanocomposite: Thermal Behaviour, Morphology and Crystallinity

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr10020299

Keywords

Bambara groundnut; starch; soluble dietary fibre; nanocomposites; phase behaviour

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The particle sizes, functional groups, crystallinity, morphology, and thermal properties of Bambara groundnut starch-soluble dietary fibre nanocomposite (STASOL) were studied. The results showed that STASOL had good thermal stability and could be used in high-temperature food applications.
Bambara groundnut (BGN) starch-soluble dietary fibre nanocomposite (STASOL) was manufactured by grafting 1.95 g BGN soluble dietary fibre (BGN-SDF) onto 15 g BGN starch (BGNS). The particle sizes, functional groups, crystallinity, morphology and thermal properties of BGNS, BGN-SDF and STASOL were studied using a Zetasizer, Fourier transform infrared, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscope and differential scanning calorimetry, respectively. STASOL had a particle size and conductivity of 74.01 nm and -57.3 mV, respectively. BGN-SDF and STASOL were amorphous and BGNS was classified as type C starch, typical of legumes. The biopolymers had functional groups in the regions 2900-3600, 1600-1642, 900-1200 and 800-1300 cm(-1), which could be attributed to the vibrational stretching of OH groups, vibration of OH groups in the non-crystalline region of starch, vibration of C-O, C-C and C-H-O bonds and the vibration of C-O and C-C bonds, respectively. BGNS had smooth, oval structures while BGN-SDF and STASOL exhibited irregular, polygonal morphologies. STASOL was the most thermally stable biopolymer, disintegrating at 293 degrees C, therefore suggesting that it would find use in high-temperature food applications such as baking.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available