4.7 Article

Acetylation of banana (Musa paradisiaca L.) and corn (Zea mays L.) starches using a microwave heating procedure and iodine as catalyst: II. Rheological and structural studies

Journal

CARBOHYDRATE POLYMERS
Volume 92, Issue 2, Pages 1256-1261

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2012.10.040

Keywords

Banana starch; Acetylation; Rheology; Structure; Chromatography

Funding

  1. SIP-IPN
  2. COFAA-IPN
  3. EDI-IPN

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The effect of iodine concentration on the acetylation of starches with low and moderate degree of substitution (DS<0.5) and its impact on the physicochemical feature and structural features was evaluated. The acetylated starches were prepared with 0.03 mol anhydroglucose unit, 0.12 mol of anhydride acetic, and 0.6, 0.9 or 1.4 mM of molecular iodine as catalyst in a sealed Teflon vessel using microwave heating (600 W/2 min). Pasting profile and rheological properties were obtained under steady flow; dynamic oscillatory test was used. Structural features were obtained by HPSEC-RI. In acetylated starches, DS and acetyl groups increased when the iodine concentration increased, corn starch showed higher values than banana starch. The viscosity of acetylated starches decreased relative to unmodified starches while, acetylated corn starch had lower value than acetylated banana starch. In the flow curves, a non-Newtonian pattern (shear-thinning) was shown in the pastes of native and modified starches. Storage modulus (G') and loss modulus (G '') showed low dependence on frequency (G' alpha omega(0.1); G ''alpha omega(0.2)) on frequency sweep test, which is characteristic of a viscoelastic gel. Debranched native banana and corn starches presented trimodal chain-length distribution. The pattern was maintained in the acetylated starches, but with different level of short and long chains. The structural differences in native and acetylated samples explain the theological characteristics in both starches. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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