TY - JOUR
T1 - On the investigation of composite cooling/heating set gel systems based on rice starch and curdlan
AU - Wang, Jing
AU - Ma, Qianhui
AU - Cai, Pingxiong
AU - Sun, Xinyu
AU - Sun, Qingjie
AU - Li, Man
AU - Wang, Yanfei
AU - Zhong, Lei
AU - Xie, Fengwei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/4/16
Y1 - 2024/4/16
N2 - In pursuit of advancing the understanding of composite gel systems, this study delves into the intricate realm of rheology, structural elucidation, and mechanical attributes. Specifically, it scrutinizes the symbiotic interplay between rice starch, a cooling-set gel, and curdlan, a thermo-irreversible heating-set gel. A higher curdlan content enhances the inter-chain hydrogen bonding between rice starch and curdlan, resulting in a denser gel structure and thus increased moduli, solid-like behavior, and mechanical properties, and reduced frequency-dependence, especially at high temperatures (>65 °C). For example, with 50 % curdlan incorporation, G′ (90 °C) improved by 252 %. Notably, thermal treatment can compromise the structural integrity of the rice starch gel, reducing strength and softening texture. However, this textural degradation can be effectively mitigated with, for example, 30 % curdlan incorporation, resulting in a 55-fold hardness increase at 85 °C. The knowledge gained from this work offers valuable guidance for tailoring starch-based gel products to specific properties.
AB - In pursuit of advancing the understanding of composite gel systems, this study delves into the intricate realm of rheology, structural elucidation, and mechanical attributes. Specifically, it scrutinizes the symbiotic interplay between rice starch, a cooling-set gel, and curdlan, a thermo-irreversible heating-set gel. A higher curdlan content enhances the inter-chain hydrogen bonding between rice starch and curdlan, resulting in a denser gel structure and thus increased moduli, solid-like behavior, and mechanical properties, and reduced frequency-dependence, especially at high temperatures (>65 °C). For example, with 50 % curdlan incorporation, G′ (90 °C) improved by 252 %. Notably, thermal treatment can compromise the structural integrity of the rice starch gel, reducing strength and softening texture. However, this textural degradation can be effectively mitigated with, for example, 30 % curdlan incorporation, resulting in a 55-fold hardness increase at 85 °C. The knowledge gained from this work offers valuable guidance for tailoring starch-based gel products to specific properties.
KW - Composite gels
KW - Curdlan
KW - Fractal structure
KW - Rheological properties
KW - Rice starch
KW - Textural properties
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85177083642&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.foodchem.2023.137960
DO - 10.1016/j.foodchem.2023.137960
M3 - Article
C2 - 37979259
AN - SCOPUS:85177083642
SN - 0308-8146
VL - 438
JO - Food Chemistry
JF - Food Chemistry
M1 - 137960
ER -