Cereals & Grains Association
Log In

Relationship Between Single Wheat Kernel Particle-Size Distribution and Perten SKCS 4100 Hardness Index

November 2007 Volume 84 Number 6
Pages 567 — 575
T. Pearson,1,2 J. Wilson,1 J. Gwirtz,3 E. Maghirang,1 F. Dowell,1 P. McCluskey,4 and S. Bean1

USDA-ARS-GMPRC, Manhattan, KS. Names are necessary to report factually on available data; however, the USDA neither guarantees nor warrants the standard of the product, and the use of the name by the USDA implies no approval of the product to the exclusion of others that may also be suitable. Corresponding author. E-mail: thomas.pearson@gmprc.ksu.edu Kansas State University, Dept. Grain Science. GIPSA, Kansas City, MO.


Go to Article:
Accepted June 19, 2007.
ABSTRACT

The Perten Single Kernel Characterization system is the current reference method for determination of single wheat kernel texture. However, the SKCS 4100 calibration method is based on bulk samples. The objective of this research was to develop a single-kernel hardness reference based on single-kernel particle-size distributions (PSD). A total of 473 kernels, drawn from eight different classes, was studied. Material from single kernels that had been crushed on the SKCS 4100 system was collected, milled, then the PSD of each ground single kernel was measured. Wheat kernels from soft and hard classes with similar SKCS hardness indices (HI 40–60) typically had a PSD that was expected from their genetic class. That is, soft kernels tended to have more particles at <21 μm than hard kernels after milling. As such, a combination of HI and PSD gives better discrimination between genetically hard and soft classes than either parameter measured independently. Additionally, the use of SKCS-predicted PSD, combined with other low level SKCS parameters, appears to reduce classification errors into genetic hardness classes by ≈50% over what is currently accomplished with HI alone.



This article is in the public domain and not copyrightable. It may be freely reprinted with customary crediting of the source. AACC International, Inc., 2007.