Structure of starch aerogel as affected by crosslinking and feasibility assessment of the aerogel for an anti-fungal volatile release

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Abstract

Starch suspensions were crosslinked with trisodium citrate for either 0 or 17 h, gelled and then freeze-dried to corresponding aerogels. The aerogel from the 17 h-crosslinked suspension was loaded with the antifungal compound, trans-2-hexenal, and coated with the surfactant, sorbitan monooleate. Aerogel hardness was increased by the citrate-mediated crosslinking, whereas its adhesiveness decreased. Starch gelation decreased the crystallinity index (CrI) from 59% to ≈23%; however, the pre-gelation crosslinking resulted in a higher CrI value (i.e. ≈38%) for the aerogel. The voids at the internal microstructure of the 17 h-crosslinked aerogel were more uniform and coating with surfactant closed the surface openings. The latter accordingly resulted in a more sustained release of the volatile, trans-2-hexenal, from the crosslinked starch aerogel and led to slower lethality of Aspergillus parasiticus cells inoculated on pistachio nuts compared with the non-coated condition.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)147-152
Number of pages6
JournalFood Chemistry
Volume221
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Apr 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Antimicrobe
  • Surfactant
  • Volatile

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