Dietary fibers (DF) of the "cellan" type (consisting mainly or exclusively
of undestroyed cells) were prepared as ethanol-dried materials from apple,
cabbage, sugar-beet, soybean hulls, wheat bran, and suspension cultures of
Chenopodium album L. and investigated with respect to their interactions wi
th water, water-oil dispersions, bile acids, and oil. Water binding and ret
ention capacities were found to be especially high in cellans obtained from
thin-walled raw material. Water damp sorption by dry cellans, when analyze
d according to the GAB and BET equations, shows a considerable fraction of
monolayer water. At a water activity of 0.98, the cell and capillary spaces
outside the walls remained in the air-filled state but the cell wall pores
are filled with water. When the water content of a concentrated aqueous ce
llan suspension was equal to or below the water binding capacity, its rheol
ogical behavior was found to be of pseudoplastic nature. At a given dry wei
ght concentration, yield stress and viscosity of such concentrated suspensi
ons were highest for cellans with the highest water binding capacity. Dry c
ellan particles absorbed fatty oils without swelling but swell in a deterge
nt-stabilized oil/water emulsion with a similar liquid absorption capacity
as in water. In contrast to the dry or alkane-saturated cell wall, the hydr
ated wall is not permeable to oils in the absence of a detergent. Oil dropl
ets may be entrapped within the cells, yielding a stable dispersion of oil
in water. As DF of the cellan type absorb bile acids, preferentially glycoc
onjugates, from diluted solutions, they may have a potential to decrease th
e serum cholesterol level.