corn fibre
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Author(s):  
N Sunitha ◽  
S Manohar Babu ◽  
B Appa Rao

Sweet corn fibres of about 15 gm were extracted with methanol for 5 hours in heating mantle at 40C and filtered and allowed to dry. The dried gel was further analyzed for estimation of Retinyl palmitate by spectrophotometrically by laboratory method and found to be 140 mg/kg. The dried extract gel was further estimated for ascorbic acid both by UV and HPTLC and found to be linear in the range of 1-5 ug/ml and 5-10ug/ml, correlation coefficient was found to be 0.997 and 0.998 and the amount of ascorbic acid was found to be 338 ng/ml and 9.9 ng/ml by UV and HPTLC respectively. The method was found to be linear.


2021 ◽  
pp. 105298
Author(s):  
Elisângela Ramieres Gomes ◽  
Lauren Carvalho Montalvão Carneiro ◽  
Rodrigo Stephani ◽  
Antônio Fernandes de Carvalho ◽  
Isis Rodrigues Toledo Renhe ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 4682
Author(s):  
Rita Valério ◽  
João G. Crespo ◽  
Claudia F. Galinha ◽  
Carla Brazinha

Corn fibre, a co-product of the starch industry, is rich in compounds with high added value, such as ferulic acid and arabinoxylans, which are released during alkaline extraction. This work aims to optimise an efficient separation method for the recovery of these two compounds from a corn fibre alkaline extract, allowing an efficient valorisation of this co-product. Ultrafiltration was selected as separation method, due to its potential to fractionate these compounds. In order to minimise the loss of membrane permeance, due to mass transfer limitations caused by the high arabinoxylan viscosity, the impact of relevant ultrafiltration operating parameters (membrane molecular weight cut-off, fluid dynamics conditions, transmembrane pressure, and operating temperature) were evaluated. A Nadir UP 150 membrane was found to be an adequate choice, allowing for an efficient separation of ferulic acid from arabinoxylans, with null rejection of ferulic acid, a high estimated rejection of arabinoxylans 98.0% ± 1.7%, and the highest permeance of all tested membranes. A response surface methodology (RSM) was used to infer the effect of ultrafiltration conditions (crossflow velocity, transmembrane pressure and operating temperature) on the rejection of ferulic acid, retention of arabinoxylans (assessed through apparent viscosity of the retentate stream), and permeance. Through mathematical modelling it was possible to determine that the best conditions are the highest operating temperature and initial crossflow velocity tested (66 °C and 1.06 m.s−1, respectively), and the lowest transmembrane pressure tested (0.7 bar).


2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (12) ◽  
pp. 4649-4659
Author(s):  
Fumin Ma ◽  
Xiaolei Li ◽  
Jiayu Yin ◽  
Lin Ma ◽  
Dan Li

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (23) ◽  
pp. 8337-8352
Author(s):  
Reskandi C. Rudjito ◽  
Amparo Jiménez-Quero ◽  
Mahmoud Hamzaoui ◽  
Stéphane Kohnen ◽  
Francisco Vilaplana

Subcritical water tunes the molar mass and substitution pattern of complex xylans from corn fibre, preserving the bound ferulic monomers and dimers.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan P. Lowery ◽  
Jacob M. Wilson ◽  
Andrew Barninger ◽  
Matthew H. Sharp ◽  
Christopher Irvin ◽  
...  

No abstract available.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan P. Lowery ◽  
Jacob M. Wilson ◽  
Andrew Barninger ◽  
Matthew H. Sharp ◽  
Christopher Irvin ◽  
...  

Dietary fibre refers to nutrients in the diet that gastrointestinal enzymes do not digest. If properly labelled, dietary fibres should not significantly elevate blood glucose or insulin and should ferment in the large intestine. Because of the recent rise in low-carbohydrate products on the market, consumers use these various fibres without adequate knowledge concerning whether or not these ingredients affect any blood parameters and constitute a dietary fibre. The aim of this study was to examine the impact of isomaltooligosaccharides (IMO) as compared to soluble corn fibre (SCF) consumption on blood glucose, insulin and breath hydrogen responses in healthy young men and women. After an overnight fast, nine individuals consumed 25 g of either placebo (PLA), IMO or SCF. Breath hydrogen was significantly higher in the SCF condition than in the IMO and PLA at 90, 120, 150 and 180 min (p < 0.0001). Blood glucose and insulin were higher in the IMO condition (p < 0.0001) at 30 min compared to the SCF or PLA conditions, which were not significantly different from each other. These data suggest that IMO does not constitute a dietary fibre and instead should be explored as a slow-digesting carbohydrate.


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