EXPERIMENTAL AND MODELING STUDIES OF THE FLOW PROPERTIES OF MAIZE ANDWAXY MAIZE STARCH PASTES

Citation
Qd. Nguyen et al., EXPERIMENTAL AND MODELING STUDIES OF THE FLOW PROPERTIES OF MAIZE ANDWAXY MAIZE STARCH PASTES, Chemical engineering journal, 70(2), 1998, pp. 165-171
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Chemical
Volume
70
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
165 - 171
Database
ISI
SICI code
Abstract
Methods have been developed for characterising the time-dependent and non-Newtonian rheological behaviour of gelatinized maize starch pastes as a function of starch concentration, temperature and shearing condi tions. Two types of commercial maize starch were used in this study: a normal maize with 30% amylose, and a waxy maize consisting mainly of amylopectin. Results from transient flow property measurements using a concentric cylinder viscometer show that the starch pastes are strong ly thixotropic and shear thinning as characterised by a viscosity that decreases with time and rate of shear. The rheology of the starch pas tes studied can be satisfactorily modelled using the structural kineti c approach which postulates that after gelatinization and cooling, the polysaccharide polymers and the swollen starch granules form network structures which are irreversibly broken under shear leading to the ti me- and shear-dependent change in the flow properties. At equilibrium, the starch pastes exhibit pseudoplastic behaviour which can be descri bed by the power law model. While pastes of the two maize starches stu died exhibit similar rheological behaviour at the same starch concentr ation and temperature, the normal maize starch paste is more viscous i nitially in the gel state, but breaks down more rapidly and becomes th inner than the waxy maize starch paste under the steady-state sheared condition. This difference is due to the different gel structures form ed on cooling, and to the different swelling characteristics of the gr anules of the two maize starches studied. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science S. A. All rights reserved.