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Tailoring the rheological properties of high protein suspension by thermal-mechanical treatment.

Authors :
Siddiqui, Uzma
Ilavsky, Jan
Chen, Da
Source :
Food Hydrocolloids. Sep2023, Vol. 142, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The viscoelasticity of concentrated protein suspensions associates closely with the mixing efficiency and cleaning frequency of facility during high-protein food development. This study investigated the effects of thermal-mechanical treatment on the viscoelasticity of milk protein isolate (MPI) suspensions and their underlying mechanisms to develop protein ingredient with low viscoelasticity. MPI suspensions (20%) were treated at 25, 50 and 85 °C for 10–60 min under constant shear (100 s−1), followed by storage at 4 °C. The viscosity (η) of MPI suspension treated at 50 °C and 85 °C was ∼1–10% as those treated at 25 °C. After four days of storage at 4 °C, η showed the least value in 50°C-treated samples compared to those at 25 °C and 85 °C. The η and storage modulus (G') was decreased with prolonged treatment at 25 and 50 °C, whereas opposite trend was found in 85 °C treated samples. Differential scanning calorimetry found proteins in 50 °C treated samples had smaller enthalpy than those in the control and 25 °C treated samples. Protein surface hydrophobicity was increased slightly from 25 °C to 50 °C, but remarkably in 85 °C treated samples. Ultra-small angle x-ray scattering showed the radius of gyration (R g) of casein micelle was ∼38 nm at 25 °C and 50 °C treated samples but increased to ∼44 nm 85 °C treated samples with reduced compactness. A new sphere-like structure with R g of 18 nm was generated in 85 °C treated samples. These findings suggested modulating temperature during thermal-mechanical treatment is essential to alter protein structures and morphology for desirable rheological properties. [Display omitted] • 50 °C treated MPI suspensions had the least viscosity and elasticity. • Proteins in 50 °C treated MPI suspensions had lower enthalpy than those at 25 °C. • 85 °C increased the size of casein micelle but reduced its compactness. • Duration of treatment has milder effect on viscoelasticity compared to temperature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0268005X
Volume :
142
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Food Hydrocolloids
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163848258
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodhyd.2023.108863