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Journal ArticleDOI

Gelatinisation characteristics of cassava starch settled in the presence of different chemicals

TLDR
In this article, the effect of added chemicals such as acids (sulphuric and hydrochloric acids), bleaching and oxidising agents (sodium metabisulphite and sodium hypochlorite) and alum during settling on the thermal and pasting properties of the cassava starch was examined.
Abstract
Addition of chemicals during the extraction of cassava starch for enhancing the settling rate, whiteness and compactness of the settled starch is an accepted commercial practice. The effect of addition of selected chemicals such as acids (sulphuric and hydrochloric acids), bleaching and oxidising agents (sodium metabisulphite and sodium hypochlorite) and alum during settling on the thermal and pasting properties of the cassava starch was examined. Treatment with sulphuric acid produced a noticeable increase in all DSC gelatinisation parameters, viz. onset gelatinisation temperature (T-o), temperature at peak minimum (T-p) and end temperature (T-e), with increasing concentration of acid, while only a marginal shift could be obtained even at higher concentration of hydrochloric acid. However, no major effect resulted from treatment with sodium metabisulphite, sodium hypochlorite and alum. The gelatinisation enthalpy was hardly affected by the treatments. An exception was hydrochloric acid, which brought about a perceptible decrease in enthalpy at higher concentrations indicating that starch crystallinity is influenced to a small extent by hydrochloric acid. Pasting characteristics studied using a Rapid Visco Analyser showed that sulphuric acid, even at the lowest concentration (5 mM), considerably affected the structural characteristics of cassava starch, while hydrochloric acid induced similar effect only at higher concentrations. Alum reduced the paste viscosity while the bleaching agents (sodium metabisulphite and sodium hypochlorite) were not so effective in modifying the starch viscosity characteristics.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular and physicochemical characterisation of starches from yam, cocoyam, cassava, sweet potato and ginger produced in the Ivory Coast

TL;DR: Granule sizes, macromolecular features and thermal and pasting properties of starches from seven tropical sources (Florido, Kponan and Esculenta yams, cocoyam, cassava, sweet potato and ginger) were compared with those of several well-known cereal, legume and tuber starches as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gelatinisation Properties of Cassava Starch in the Presence of Salts, Acids and Oxidising Agents

TL;DR: The effect of various cations, anions, acids and oxidising agents on the gelatinization properties of cassava starch was studied and wide variation was observed in the pasting and swelling properties as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrothermal Modifications of Tropical Tuber Starches. 1. Effect of Heat-Moisture Treatment on the Physicochemical, Rheological and Gelatinization Characteristics

TL;DR: In this article, a comparative study was performed on the pasting properties, swelling behavior and the gelatinization properties of the modified starches and also on the rheological and textural properties of their pastes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthesis, characterization and swelling behaviour of superabsorbent polymers from cassava starch‐graft‐poly(acrylamide)

TL;DR: In this article, superabsorbent polymers (SAPs) were prepared from cassava starch by graft copolymerization of acrylamide on to starch using ceric ammonium nitrate (CAN) as free radical initiator, followed by alkali saponification.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of incubation temperature and time on resistant starch type III formation from autoclaved and acid-hydrolysed cassava starch

TL;DR: In this article, the formation of RS III was evaluated in relation to variable incubation temperature (−20 to 100°C), incubation time (6-48h) and autoclaving time (15-90min).
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