4.5 Article

Molecular mobility in model dough systems studied by time-domain nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

Journal

JOURNAL OF CEREAL SCIENCE
Volume 45, Issue 3, Pages 257-262

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcs.2006.07.015

Keywords

starch; gluten; dough; water mobility distribution; time-domain NMR spectroscopy

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The microscopic distribution and dynamic state of water and molecular mobility in various model systems are investigated using time-domain NMR spectroscopy. Starch and gluten showed different continuous distribution populations in T-21 (mu sec range, obtained from One pulse experiments) and T-22 (msee range, obtained from CPMG experiments) proving that starch and gluten have different water dynamics and molecular mobility. A starch/gluten mixture (76:12, w/w) and wheat flour dough exhibited similar patterns indicating that water and molecular mobilities in dough tended to be more representative of interactions with starch than gluten, even though both water starch and water-gluten interactions are occurring in wheat flour dough. Increasing the water content did not influence the continuous distribution pattern of T-21 but affected the relative amount of each fraction in T-21 (i.e. an increase of the more mobile fraction and a decrease of the less mobile fraction with increasing moisture). Added water has an important role in the more mobile fraction but not in the less mobile fraction, which is in lts range. This indicates that model food systems contain multiple microstructural domains with various water and molecular mobilities that show correspondingly different water dynamics. Therefore, the dispersion of various relaxation time constants helped identify the distribution of independent microstructural domains. The manipulation of the composition of the model food system influences the water dynamics and molecular mobility and provides a basis for the application of the microstructural domain concept to real food systems. (C) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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