| Literature DB >> 25977009 |
Scheling Wibowo1, Tara Grauwet1, Jihan Santanina Santiago1, Jovana Tomic1, Liesbeth Vervoort1, Marc Hendrickx1, Ann Van Loey2.
Abstract
In view of understanding colour instability of pasteurised orange juice during storage, to the best of our knowledge, this study reports for the first time in a systematic and quantitative way on a range of changes in specific quality parameters as a function of time and as well as temperature (20-42 °C). A zero-order (°Brix, fructose, glucose), a first-order (vitamin C), a second-order (sucrose) and a fractional conversion model (oxygen) were selected to model the evolution of the parameters between parentheses. Activation energies ranged from 22 to 136 kJ mol(-1), HMF formation being the most temperature sensitive. High correlations were found between sugars, ascorbic acid, their degradation products (furfural and HMF) and total colour difference (ΔE(∗)). Based on PLS regression, the importance of the quality parameters for colour degradation was ranked relatively among each other: the acid-catalysed degradation of sugars and ascorbic acid degradation reactions appeared to be important for browning development in pasteurised orange juice during ambient storage.Entities:
Keywords: 5-Hydroxymethylfurfural (PubChem: CID 237332); Ascorbic acid (PubChem CID: 54670067); Colour; Fructose (PubChem CID: 5984); Furfural (PubChem: CID 7362); Glucose (PubChem: CID 5793); Kinetics; Multivariate data analysis; Orange juice; Quality; Storage; Sucrose (PubChem: CID 5988)
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25977009 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2015.03.131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514