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Particle Agglomeration and Properties of Pregelatinized Potato Starch Powderopen access

Authors
Lee, HyunwooYoo, Byoungseung
Issue Date
Feb-2023
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
pregelatinized starch; particle agglomeration; structural change; maltodextrin; rheological property
Citation
Gels, v.9, no.2, pp 1 - 14
Pages
14
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Gels
Volume
9
Number
2
Start Page
1
End Page
14
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/19212
DOI
10.3390/gels9020093
ISSN
2310-2861
2310-2861
Abstract
Pregelatinized starches are used as thickeners in many instant food products. The unique properties of pregelatinized starches, such as their dispersibility in water and high viscosity, are generally desirable for instant food products. However, powdered starches cannot be easily dispersed in cold water due to clumping. The most reliable method to solve this problem is particle size enlargement by an agglomeration technique that causes a structural change in the starch. In this study, pregelatinized potato starch powder (PPSP) was agglomerated in a fluidized bed agglomerator, after which the physical, structural, and rheological properties of the PPSP agglomerated with different maltodextrin (MD) binder concentrations were investigated. The powder solubility and flowability (CI and HR) of all the agglomerated PPSPs were improved, and the particle size (D-50) tended to increase as the MD concentration increased, except for the control (0% MD) and the 40% MD. The changes in the particle size of the agglomerated PPSPs were consistent with the SEM image analysis. The magnitudes of the gel strength and viscoelastic moduli (G ' and G '') of the agglomerated PPSPs with 10% MD were higher than those of the control due to the more stable structure formed by better intermolecular interaction in the starch and MD during the agglomeration process. Therefore, our results indicated that the fluidized bed agglomeration process and the MD addition as a binder solution greatly influence the physical, structural, and rheological properties of PPSP.
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College of Life Science and Biotechnology > Department of Food Science & Biotechnology > 1. Journal Articles

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