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1.
Food Bioproc Tech ; 12(2): 313-324, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30873256

RESUMO

The effect of three drying processes (freeze, oven and supercritical CO2 drying) on CP Kelco low-acyl gellan gum gel was investigated, highlighting the role of the water removal mechanism (i.e. sublimation, evaporation and solvent replacement/extraction) and the process parameters on the gel structure, rather than focusing on the drying kinetics. It is the first time that a research paper not only compares the drying methods but also discusses and investigates how the molecular and macroscopic levels of gellan gum are affected during drying. Specifically, the dried gel structures were characterised by bulk density and shrinkage analyses as well as scanning electron microscope (SEM) and micro-computed tomography (µCT) microscopy. Micro-differential scanning calorimetry (µDSC) was used in a novel way to investigate the effect of the drying technique on the polymer disorder chains by partial melting of the gel. The resulting water uptake during rehydration was influenced by the obtained dried structure and, therefore, by the employed drying process. It was found that freeze-dried (FD) structures had a fast rehydration rate, while both oven-dried (OD) and supercritical CO2-dried (scCO2D) structures were slower. After 30 min, FD samples achieved a normalised moisture content (NMC) around 0.83, whereas OD and scCO2D samples around 0.33 and 0.19, respectively. In this context, depending on the role of the specific hydrocolloid in food (i.e. gelling agent, thickener, carrier), one particular dried-gel structure could be more appropriate than another. Graphical abstractFrom left to right: unprocessed hydrogels; µ-CT images of dried gels and unprocessed hydrogel; DSC curves after drying process.

2.
Food Biophys ; 13(3): 304-315, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30100823

RESUMO

The effect of sucrose and mannitol addition to low-acyl (LA) gellan gum gels at both the molecular and macroscopic levels prior to, and after freeze-drying has been investigated. It has been shown that the gel network order as well as the mechanical properties are changed with the solute content, especially in the case of sucrose. The freeze-dried gel structure, containing either mannitol or sucrose, was studied, reporting for the first time the interaction of mannitol with the gellan gum gel. The generated freeze-dried gel network was evaluated in terms of porosity, pore size and wall thickness distributions. The solute physical state was correlated the water activity trend as a function of the solute content. Since mannitol is crystalline, the water activity decreases, in contrast with the amorphous sucrose. The rehydration mechanism was investigated and associated with the solute release from the structure. Specifically, the material properties (surface and bulk) as well as the role of the dissolution medium over time were assessed. It was found that the rehydration for both the gellan/sucrose and gellan/mannitol systems was highly influenced by the additive content, as an increase in water uptake was measured up to 10 wt%. A further increase in solute led to a considerable drop in the rehydration rate and extent due to the change in the freeze-dried structure, with smaller pores and with higher wall thickness values.

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