The effects of process conditions on rheological properties of functional citrus fibre suspensions

2020 ◽  
Vol 121 ◽  
pp. 54-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.R. Lupi ◽  
F. Puoci ◽  
E. Bruno ◽  
N. Baldino ◽  
R. Marino ◽  
...  
Foods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1509
Author(s):  
Patrick Wittek ◽  
Heike P. Karbstein ◽  
M. Azad Emin

High moisture extrusion (HME) of meat analogues is often performed with raw materials containing multiple components, e.g., blends of different protein-rich raw materials. For instance, blends of soy protein isolate (SPI) and another component, such as wheat gluten, are used particularly frequently. The positive effect of blending on product texture is well known but not yet well understood. Therefore, this work targets investigating the influence of blending in HME at a mechanistic level. For this, SPI and a model protein, whey protein concentrate (WPC), were blended at three different ratios (100:0, 85:15, 70:30) and extruded at typical HME conditions (55% water content, 115/125/133 °C material temperature). Process conditions, rheological properties, morphology development, product structure and product texture were analysed. With increasing WPC percentage, the anisotropic structures became more pronounced and the anisotropy index (AI) higher. The achieved AI from the extrudates with a ratio of 70:30 (SPI:WPC) were considerably higher than comparable extrudates reported in other studies. In all extrudates, a multiphase system was visible whose morphology had changed due to the WPC addition. The WPC led to the formation of a much smaller dispersed phase compared to the overlying multiphase structure, the size of which depends on the thermomechanical stresses. These findings demonstrate that targeted mixing of protein-rich raw materials could be a promising method to tailor the texture of extruded meat analogues.


2021 ◽  
pp. 106819
Author(s):  
Claudia Berlanga-Reyes ◽  
Hiram Y. Guerrero-Elias ◽  
Moisés Ignacio-Pacheco ◽  
Victor Contreras-Jácquez ◽  
Rosa Camacho-Ruíz ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 64-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Wittek ◽  
Nicole Zeiler ◽  
Heike P. Karbstein ◽  
M. Azad Emin

AbstractHighly concentrated biopolymers are used in food extrusion processing. It is well known that rheo-logical properties of biopolymers influence considerably both process conditions and product properties. Therefore, characterization of rheological properties under extrusion-relevant conditions is crucial to process and product design. Since conventional rheological methods are still lacking for this purpose, a novel approach is presented. A closed cavity rheometer known in the rubber industry was used to systematically characterize a highly concentrated soy protein, a very relevant protein in extruded meat analogues. Rheological properties were first determined and discussed in the linear viscoelastic range (SAOS). Rheo-logical analysis was then carried out in the non-linear viscoelastic range (LAOS), as high deformations in extrusion demand for measurements at process-relevant high strains. The protein showed gel behavior in the linear range, while liquid behavior was observed in the nonlinear range. An expected increase in elasticity through addition of methylcellulose was detected. The measurements in the non-linear range reveal significant changes of material behavior with increasing strain. As another tool for rheological characterization, a stress relaxation test was carried out which confirmed the increase of elastic behavior after methylcellulose addition.


1997 ◽  
Vol 36 (11) ◽  
pp. 19-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Poitou ◽  
G. Racineux ◽  
N. Burlion

Sewage sludges exhibit in most cases rheological properties which do not allow us to classify them either as simple fluids or as solids. On one hand, they are not simple fluids because of their non-Newtonian, shear-thinning and time-dependent (thixotropic or rheopectic) behaviour and because of the possibility for some of them of showing a yield stress. On the other hand, they can hardly be considered as solids, mostly because of their high sensitivity to velocity and because they are practically very often pumped as if they were fluids. This intermediate state sometimes referred to as paste state is in fact very common and is extensively studied, from a manufacturing point of view in areas like ceramics, food or polymer processing and from a civil engineering point of view in soil mechanics for the determination of clay rheology. Many experimental tests have already been designed for their characterisation. The aim of this presentation is to compare some of them and try to make a synthesis between the engineering rheology and soil mechanics approaches. For this purpose we show experimental results on the same material with different rheometric devices: viz (i) a tube (or capillary) ROSAND rheometer, (ii) a triaxial soil mechanics cell, (iii) an oscillatory, stress driven, plane and plane STRESSTECH rheometer, and (iv) a specific squeezing device which has been designed here following an idea introduced by Laun for polymers. The triaxial cell and the plane and plane rheometers are similar in the sense that they are supposed to allow for an homogeneous state of stress and strain (or rate of strain). In contrast, the tube or squeezing test does not allow for a homogeneous mechanical state. This means that the first two tests enable a real measure of the constitutive relation but in limited conditions while the two others provide a way to identify rheological parameters in flow conditions which are close to the process conditions. The main originalities of this presentation are (i) the balanced point of view between the fluid and the solid mechanics approach and (ii) the method by which the contact properties of the paste is measured with the tube and the squeezing rheometer, giving evidence of a water migration inside the paste.


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