Study with Greenwich  | Student Information  | About Us  | Research  | Contact Us

About GALA

Browse Contents

Guide to Depositing in GALA

For Greenwich Depositing Authors

Quick Search on GALA

Advanced Search

Search the University website

Comparative behaviour of cellulosic and starchy plant materials during osmotic dehydration

Tortoe, Charles, Orchard, John and Beezer, Anthony (2007) Comparative behaviour of cellulosic and starchy plant materials during osmotic dehydration. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 87 (7). pp. 1284-1291. ISSN 0022-5142

Full text not available from this repository.
Official URL: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/1141881...

Abstract

Abstract: Osmotic dehydration studies on two cellulosic plant materials – Golden Delicious and Cox apple – and
two starchy plant materials – banana and potato – showed that the amount and rate of water loss occurred in the following descending order: Golden Delicious > Cox > potato > banana. Temperature, concentration and immersion time of samples in the osmotic solution played a significant effect on amount and rate of water loss in all commodities in a descending order as follows: 55 > 40 > 32.2 ◦C; 0.70 > 0.60 > 0.50 > 0.40 g kg−1; and 30 > 60 > 90 > 120 min, respectively. A corresponding uptake of solids from the osmotic solution occurred, the rate been greatest over the first 30min, before declining significantly thereafter. The diffusion coefficients for water loss (Deff,w) measured by the method of slopes on the water loss rate curves conducted at 32.2, 40 and 55 ◦C for 0.40,0.50, 0.60 and 0.70 g kg−1 sucrose concentration solutions were higher for cellulosic plant materials than starchy plant materials. Significant variations occurred in efficiency index (WL/SG) between cellulosic and starchy plant materials.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: osmotic dehydration, diffusion coefficient, efficiency index
Subjects: T Technology > TP Chemical technology
Q Science > QK Botany
Q Science > QH Natural history
School / Department / Research Groups: Natural Resources Institute
Natural Resources Institute > Food & Markets
Related URLs:
Last Modified: 11 Nov 2011 12:06
URI: http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/2408

Actions (login required)

View Item