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THERMOMECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF VEGETABLE TISSUE AT oC

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Presentation on theme: "THERMOMECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF VEGETABLE TISSUE AT oC"— Presentation transcript:

1 THERMOMECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF VEGETABLE TISSUE AT 30-90 oC
Jiří Blahovec

2 STRUCTURE OF VEGETABLE TISSUE WITH STARCH (Demonstrated on potato tissue)

3 POTATO CELLULAR STRUCTURE
Cell Walls Intracellular Content

4 CELL WALL MEMBRANE Lipid Double Layer Pore – Based on Proteins
Polar hydrophilic side Hydrophobic sides Lipid Double Layer symmetrical Pore – Based on Proteins source of asymmetry

5 STARCH GRAINS Pukhraj, (b) Kufri Jyoti, (c) Kufri Badshah
Dimension, Shape & Composition: amylose x amylopectin Pukhraj, (b) Kufri Jyoti, (c) Kufri Badshah Kaur et al., Food Chemistry 2002

6 DIFFERENT TUBER PARTS AT ROOM TEMPERATURE
(a) pith (b) cortex Starch grains Protein micelles Cell wall Arranged under Karlsson & Eliasson (2003), LWT 36,

7 MECHANICAL PROPERTIES and cell walls

8 POTATO Deformation Curves in Compression at room temperature
Squeezing out ~ 3 %

9 POTATO Slopes of Deformation Curves Room Temperature
True slopes: I Variable, flaccid tissue II about 3 MPa, quasi-elastic III (1.54±0.13) MPa, squeezing out

10 DYNAMIC MECHANICAL ANALYSIS (DMA)

11 TYPES OF LOADING

12 DEFORMATION PARAMETERS
Specimen dimensions: length mm width mm thickness 3 mm Distance between jaws mm Amplitude mm Frequency Hz Temperature Range oC Heating Rate oC/min Tuber tissue from cortex parenchyma Long axis of the specimen parallel to tuber axis

13 DEFORMATION PARTS Part I Deformation of flaccid tissue (generally inelastic) Turgor pressure ≤ 0 Part II Quasi-elastic deformation Turgor pressure > Cell internal pressure ≤ critical stress for squeezing out of cellular sap water Part III Mechanical dewatering (inelastic)

14 COMPLEX MODULUS OF ELASTICITY

15 COMPLEX MODULUS OF ELASTICITY Temperature Derivatives

16 COMPLEX MODULUS OF ELASTICITY Amplitude

17 COMPLEX MODULUS OF ELASTICITY Loss Tangent

18 ELECTRIC CONDUCTIVITY (Role of Temperature)
Personius, Sharp (1938) Loss of cell wall semi-permeability

19 PARTIAL CONCLUSION Mechanical and texture properties are controlled by properties of cell walls at least in part II of deformation curves at critical temperatures

20 STARCH GELATINIZATION IN POTATO DSC
Pith Cortex Stem End Bud End

21 STARCH GELATINIZATION IN POTATO Combination of DSC and DMA

22 STARCH CHANGES First Heating
POTATO STARCH CHANGES First Heating Arranged under Ratnayake & Jackson (2007) Carbohydrate Polymers 67, Tissue DMA Peak

23 POTATO STARCH CHANGES Shear Rheology X-Ray Diffraction
Arranged under Ratnayake & Jackson (2007) Carbohydrate Polymers 67, Kaur et al. (2002), Food Chemistry 79, Shear Rheology X-Ray Diffraction Partial Crystallinity Crystallinity (%) Nearly amorphous 10 45 Partial Crystallinity 45

24 POTATO STARCH CHANGES Swelling
Arranged under Li & Yeh (2001) F. Food Eng. 50,

25 ROLE OF TEMPERATURE Depending on air humidity (drying level)
Under Nilsson et al. (1958), Physiologia Plantarum 11, Depending on air humidity (drying level) Solutions Starch Critical Temperature

26 CONCLUSIONS Aftercritical deformation of potato tubers (i.e. at temperatures higher than 60oC) is controlled by starch gelatinization, DMA detects gelatinization in state in which the thermally controlled processes detected by DSC are finished,

27 THANK FOR YOUR ATTENTION!


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