Effects of plasma-activated water combined with ultrasonic treatment of corn starch on structural, thermal, physicochemical, functional, and pasting properties
•A combination of PAW and UL (PUL) was applied for corn starch modification.•Surface destruction and increased in short-range order and crystallinity were observed.•PUL increased the gelatinization parameters and reduced retrogradation of starch.•PUL enhanced water absorption, swelling power, and co...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ultrasonics sonochemistry 2024-08, Vol.108, p.106963, Article 106963 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •A combination of PAW and UL (PUL) was applied for corn starch modification.•Surface destruction and increased in short-range order and crystallinity were observed.•PUL increased the gelatinization parameters and reduced retrogradation of starch.•PUL enhanced water absorption, swelling power, and color properties of starch.•The starch subjected to dual modification exhibited the most ideal properties.
In this study, corn starch was used as the raw material, and modified starch was prepared using a method combining plasma-activated water and ultrasound treatment (PUL). This method was compared with treatments using plasma-activated water (PAW) and ultrasound (UL) alone. The structure, thermal, physicochemical, pasting, and functional properties of the native and treated starches were evaluated. The results indicated that PAW and UL treatments did not alter the shape of the starch granules but caused some surface damage. The PUL treatment increased the starch gelatinization temperature and enthalpy (from 11.22 J/g to 13.13 J/g), as well as its relative crystallinity (increased by 0.51 %), gel hardness (increased by 16.19 %) compared to untreated starch, without inducing a crystalline transition. The PUL treatment resulted in a whitening of the samples. The dual treatment enhanced the thermal stability of the starch paste, which can be attributed to the synergistic effect between PAW and ultrasound (PAW can modify the starch structure at a molecular level, while ultrasound can further disrupt the granule weak crystalline structures, leading to improved thermal properties). Furthermore, FTIR results suggested significant changes in the functional groups related to the water-binding capacity of starch, and the order of the double-helical structure was disrupted. The findings of this study suggest that PUL treatment is a promising new green modification technique for improving the starch structure and enhancing starch properties. However, further research is needed to tailor the approach based on the specific properties of the raw material. |
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ISSN: | 1350-4177 1873-2828 1873-2828 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ultsonch.2024.106963 |