4.3 Article

Glass transition and crystallization of amorphous trehalose-sucrose mixtures

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD PROPERTIES
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 559-574

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10942910500269824

Keywords

glass transition; trehalose; sucrose; crystallization

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Our objective was to investigate the glass transition and crystallization of trehalose-sucrose mixtures at various moisture contents. Samples were freeze-dried, rehumidified, and scanned with Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) to obtain T-g values for all mixtures and pure sugars. Amorphous cotton candy samples for crystallization studies were prepared, humidified, and monitored for crystallinity as a function of time using powder X-ray diffraction (XRD). The T-g of pure dry trehalose was found to be 106 degrees C, while sucrose had a T-g of 60 degrees C. Glass transition, as expected, occurred at an intermediate temperature for sucrose-trehalose mixtures. Of the dry samples, only those containing less than 16% trehalose showed sucrose crystallization during scanning. In cotton candy made from a 25% trehalose-75% sucrose mixture, humidified to 33%, sucrose did not crystallize after 30 days, whereas pure sucrose cotton candy at that humidity crystallized completely after 11 days. These data show that trehalose may be a useful crystallization inhibitor in foods with high sucrose content, although small amounts of trehalose did not significantly raise the T-g.

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