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Extrusion of Cross-Linked Hydroxypropylated Corn Starches II. Morphological and Molecular Characterization1

May 2000 Volume 77 Number 3
Pages 326 — 332
A. E. McPherson 2 and J. Jane 2 , 3

Journal Paper No. J-18474 of the Iowa Agriculture and Home Economics Experiment Station, Ames, IA Project No. 3258. Graduate student and Professor, respectively, Center for Crops Utilization and Research and Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011. Corresponding author. Email: jjane@iastate.edu


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Accepted January 5, 2000.
ABSTRACT

A series of cross-linked hydroxypropylated corn starches were extruded with a Leistritz micro-18 co-rotating extruder. Extrusion process variables including moisture (30, 35, and 40%), barrel temperature (60, 80, and 100°C), and screw design (low, medium, and high shear) were investigated. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of extruded starches showed a gel phase with distorted granules and granule fragments after extrusion at 60°C. After extrusion at 100°C only a gel phase was observed with no granular structures remaining. High performance size exclusion chromatography (HPSEC) equipped with multiangle laser light-scattering (MALLS) and refractive index (RI) detectors showed extruded starches degraded to different extents, depending on extrusion conditions. The average molecular weight of the amylopectin of unextruded native corn starch was 7.7 × 108. Extrusion at 30% moisture, 100°C, and high shear reduced the molecular weight of amylopectin to 1.0 × 108. Hydroxypropylated normal corn starch extruded at identical conditions showed greater decreases in amylopectin molecular weight. With the addition of cross-linking, the amylopectin fractions of the extruded starches were less degraded than those of their native and hydroxypropylated corn starch counterparts. Similarly, increasing moisture content during extrusion lowered amylopectin degradation in the extruded starches. Increasing temperature during extrusion of cross-linked hydroxypropylated starches at high moisture content (e.g., 40%) lowered amylopectin molecular weights of the extruded starches, whereas increasing extrusion temperature at low moisture content (30%) resulted in less degraded molecules. This difference was attributed to the higher glass transition temperatures of the cross-linked starches.



© 2000 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.