4.6 Article

Effect of Microwave Irradiation on Acid Hydrolysis of Faba Bean Starch: Physicochemical Changes of the Starch Granules

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27113528

Keywords

microwave energy; pasting properties; legume starch; microstructure

Funding

  1. CONACYT

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This study focused on the hydrolysis of faba bean starch using acid and microwave energy to obtain a food-grade coating material. The resulting hydrolyzed starches had low viscosity, high solubility, and desirable thermal and structural properties to be used as a coating material. The severe conditions of microwave treatment resulted in high amylose content, solubility, and absorption indexes. These hydrolyzed starches have the potential to produce matrices for functional compound delivery.
Starch is the most abundant carbohydrate in legumes (22-45 g/100 g), with distinctive properties such as high amylose and resistant starch content, longer branch chains of amylopectin, and a C-type pattern arrangement in the granules. The present study concentrated on the investigation of hydrolyzed faba bean starch using acid, assisted by microwave energy, to obtain a possible food-grade coating material. For evaluation, the physicochemical, morphological, pasting, and structural properties were analyzed. Hydrolyzed starches developed by microwave energy in an acid medium had low viscosity, high solubility indexes, diverse amylose contents, resistant starch, and desirable thermal and structural properties to be used as a coating material. The severe conditions (moisture, 40%; pure hydrochloric acid, 4 mL/100 mL; time, 60 s; and power level, 6) of microwave-treated starches resulted in low viscosity values, high amylose content and high solubility, as well as high absorption indexes, and reducing sugars. These hydrolyzed starches have the potential to produce matrices with thermo-protectants to formulate prebiotic/probiotic (symbiotic) combinations and amylose-based inclusion complexes for functional compound delivery. This emergent technology, a dry hydrolysis route, uses much less energy consumption in a shorter reaction time and without effluents to the environment compared to conventional hydrolysis.

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