| Literature DB >> 33548884 |
Huijia Mao1, Zhijun Chen1, Jie Li1, Xueyang Zhai1, Hongyan Li2, Yangyang Wen3, Jing Wang4, Baoguo Sun1.
Abstract
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is widely used to prepare pyrodextrins, especially the water-soluble pyrodextrin. In this study, the structural difference between pyrodextrins as affected by HCl is compared by characterizing the molecular size, chain-length distributions (CLDs), crystallinity, and solubility. It is found that: 1) dry heating of starch granules without HCl mainly degrades long-amylose chains while slightly affects amylopectin branches; 2) the presence of HCl during dry heating decreases the degree of polymerization (DP) range of amylose chains upon degradation from DP ~ 833-1267 to DP ~ 206-432, suggesting that the presence of HCl accelerates the breakdown of long-amylose chains; 3) both pyroconversion processes have slight effects on A-(DP ~ 6-12) and B1- chains (DP ~ 12-24), which might explain the retained granular and crystalline structure during the process. This study could improve the understanding of the role of HCl in affecting the structure and property during pyroconversion of native starch.Entities:
Keywords: Corn starch; Heating; Hydrochloric acid; Molecular structure; Pyrodextrins
Year: 2021 PMID: 33548884 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514