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Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties

The aim of the study was to compare the properties of inulin hydrogels obtained with different methods, e.g., the traditional–thermal method and new, non-thermal methods, used in food production, like ultrasonic, high-pressure homogenization (HPH), and high hydrostatic pressures (HHPs). It was found...

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Autores principales: Florowska, Anna, Florowski, Tomasz, Kruszewski, Bartosz, Janiszewska-Turak, Emilia, Bykowska, Weronika, Ksibi, Nour
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10670224/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38002211
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12224154
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author Florowska, Anna
Florowski, Tomasz
Kruszewski, Bartosz
Janiszewska-Turak, Emilia
Bykowska, Weronika
Ksibi, Nour
author_facet Florowska, Anna
Florowski, Tomasz
Kruszewski, Bartosz
Janiszewska-Turak, Emilia
Bykowska, Weronika
Ksibi, Nour
author_sort Florowska, Anna
collection PubMed
description The aim of the study was to compare the properties of inulin hydrogels obtained with different methods, e.g., the traditional–thermal method and new, non-thermal methods, used in food production, like ultrasonic, high-pressure homogenization (HPH), and high hydrostatic pressures (HHPs). It was found that each of the compared induction methods allowed for obtaining inulin hydrogels. However, the use of non-thermal induction methods allows for obtaining a gel structure faster than in the case of thermal induction. In addition, hydrogels obtained with new, non-thermal methods differ from gels obtained with thermal treatment. They were characterized by higher stability (from 1.7 percent point-of-stability parameters for HHP 150 MPa to 18.8 for HPH II cycles) and in most cases, by improved microrheological properties–lower solid–liquid balance toward the solid phase, increased elasticity and viscosity indexes, and lowering the flow index. The gels obtained with the new, non-thermal method were also characterized by a more delicate structure, including lower firmness (the differences between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 0.73 N for HHP at 500 MPa to 2.39 N for HHP at 150 MPa) and spreadability (the differences between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 7.60 Ns for HHP at 500 MPa to 15.08 Ns for HHP at 150 MPa). The color of ultrasound-induced inulin gels, regarding the HPH and HHP technique, was darker (the differences in the L* parameter between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 1.92 for HHP at 500 MPa to 4.37 for 10 min ultrasounds) and with a lower a* color parameter (the differences in the a* parameter between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 0.16 for HHP at 500 MPa to 0.39 for HPH II cycles) and b* color parameter (the differences in the b* parameter between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 1.69 for 5 min ultrasounds to 2.68 for HPH II cycles). It was also found that among the compared induction methods, the high-pressure technique has the greatest potential for modifying the properties of the created inulin hydrogels. Thanks to its application, depending on the amount of applied pressure, it was possible to obtain gels with very different characteristics, both delicate (i.e., soft and spreadable), using HHP at 150 MPa, and hard, using HHP at 500 MPa, the closest in characteristics to gels induced with the thermal method. This may allow the properties of hydrogels to be matched to the characteristics of the food matrix being created.
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spelling pubmed-106702242023-11-17 Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties Florowska, Anna Florowski, Tomasz Kruszewski, Bartosz Janiszewska-Turak, Emilia Bykowska, Weronika Ksibi, Nour Foods Article The aim of the study was to compare the properties of inulin hydrogels obtained with different methods, e.g., the traditional–thermal method and new, non-thermal methods, used in food production, like ultrasonic, high-pressure homogenization (HPH), and high hydrostatic pressures (HHPs). It was found that each of the compared induction methods allowed for obtaining inulin hydrogels. However, the use of non-thermal induction methods allows for obtaining a gel structure faster than in the case of thermal induction. In addition, hydrogels obtained with new, non-thermal methods differ from gels obtained with thermal treatment. They were characterized by higher stability (from 1.7 percent point-of-stability parameters for HHP 150 MPa to 18.8 for HPH II cycles) and in most cases, by improved microrheological properties–lower solid–liquid balance toward the solid phase, increased elasticity and viscosity indexes, and lowering the flow index. The gels obtained with the new, non-thermal method were also characterized by a more delicate structure, including lower firmness (the differences between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 0.73 N for HHP at 500 MPa to 2.39 N for HHP at 150 MPa) and spreadability (the differences between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 7.60 Ns for HHP at 500 MPa to 15.08 Ns for HHP at 150 MPa). The color of ultrasound-induced inulin gels, regarding the HPH and HHP technique, was darker (the differences in the L* parameter between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 1.92 for HHP at 500 MPa to 4.37 for 10 min ultrasounds) and with a lower a* color parameter (the differences in the a* parameter between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 0.16 for HHP at 500 MPa to 0.39 for HPH II cycles) and b* color parameter (the differences in the b* parameter between thermal and non-thermal inductions were from 1.69 for 5 min ultrasounds to 2.68 for HPH II cycles). It was also found that among the compared induction methods, the high-pressure technique has the greatest potential for modifying the properties of the created inulin hydrogels. Thanks to its application, depending on the amount of applied pressure, it was possible to obtain gels with very different characteristics, both delicate (i.e., soft and spreadable), using HHP at 150 MPa, and hard, using HHP at 500 MPa, the closest in characteristics to gels induced with the thermal method. This may allow the properties of hydrogels to be matched to the characteristics of the food matrix being created. MDPI 2023-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10670224/ /pubmed/38002211 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12224154 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Florowska, Anna
Florowski, Tomasz
Kruszewski, Bartosz
Janiszewska-Turak, Emilia
Bykowska, Weronika
Ksibi, Nour
Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties
title Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties
title_full Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties
title_fullStr Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties
title_full_unstemmed Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties
title_short Thermal and Modern, Non-Thermal Method Induction as a Factor of Modification of Inulin Hydrogel Properties
title_sort thermal and modern, non-thermal method induction as a factor of modification of inulin hydrogel properties
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10670224/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38002211
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12224154
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