| Literature DB >> 26130646 |
Fayin Ye1, Bingbing Tao2, Jia Liu2, Yan Zou2, Guohua Zhao3.
Abstract
The aim of this work was to study the effect of micronization (mechanical and jet grindings) on the physicochemical properties of the insoluble dietary fiber from citrus pomace in comparison with ordinary grinding. The results showed that micronization treatment effectively pulverized the IDF-CP powders to micron scale and significantly increased the soluble dietary fiber content (p < 0.05). Compared with mechanical grinding, jet grinding was more effective in size reduction and resulted in IDF-CP powders with narrower particle size distributions. Micronized IDF-CP powders had smaller particle size, smoother surface, higher fluidity, cation-exchange capacity, and metal cation binding capacity values, but lower water holding capacity, oil holding capacity, and swelling capacity values. These functional properties were significantly dependent on surface area and particle size (D0.5). The present study suggested that micronization treatments could modify functional properties of IDF-CP powders, which promotes their use in food applications.Entities:
Keywords: Insoluble dietary fiber; citrus pomace; physicochemical properties; ultrafine grinding
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26130646 DOI: 10.1177/1082013215593394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Sci Technol Int ISSN: 1082-0132 Impact factor: 2.023