Relationships among the Composition and Physicochemical Properties of Starches with the Characteristics of Their Films
Suzana Mali, Laura Beatriz Karam, Luiz Pereira Ramos, Maria Victória Eiras Grossmann
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Abstract
The physical, molecular, and functional properties of corn, cassava, and yam starches were related to the film properties of these starches. Corn, cassava, and yam starches contained 25%, 19%, and 30% amylose, respectively. Amylose from yam starch showed the smallest molecular weight among the starches and amylopectin from corn starch the smallest molecular weight. Cassava starch presented a higher amylopectin content, and its gels and films were less strong, more transparent, and more flexible than corn and yam films. Plasticized films of the three starches were more flexible, with a higher strain and lower stress at break when the glycerol content increased. Unplasticized films were brittle and had water vapor permeability values ranging from 6.75 x 10(-10) to 8.33 x 10(-10) g m(-1) s(-1) Pa(-1). These values decreased when the glycerol content reached 20 g/100 g of starch because a more compact structure was formed. Then, at a glycerol content of 40 g/100 g of starch, the WVP increased because the film matrixes became less dense.
Extracted Claims
11 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
amylose contains 30%
“Corn, cassava, and yam starches contained 25%, 19%, and 30% amylose, respectively.”
water vapor permeability values decrease when glycerol content reaches 20 g/100 g of starch
“These values decreased when the glycerol content reached 20 g/100 g of starch because a more compact structure was formed.”
cassava starch has higher amylopectin content
“Cassava starch presented a higher amylopectin content”