RESUMEN
Deuterium Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) measurements at 4.7 Tesla were used to study the hydration properties of potato starch suspensions as a function of the starch-to-water ratio. The deuterium NMR spectrum of potato starch suspensions consisted of a relatively tall, single Lorentzian (D2O) peak and a resolved doublet ('powder' pattern) of about 1 kHz quadrupole splitting and low amplitude. The deuterium NMR transverse relaxation rate (R*2) was measured for the single Lorentzian, deuterium oxide peak; this rate increased with increasing starch-to-water ratio. Deviations of such R*2 dependences from linearity were observed only at high ratios of starch-to-water, above approximately 40% solids. In addition to the 'free' or bulk population (which has a very fast rotational correlation time of 5 ps), a second population of water weakly sorbed on the starch granule surface was monitored and found to be in fast exchange with the bulk water; this second water population has a rotational correlation time of 17 ps at 298 K, only about three times slower than that of bulk water. Additionally, a third population of slowly exchangeable water is present, which is "anisotropically bound" and has a highly restricted motion within the potato starch granule structure; well-defined quadrupole splittings are observed from this latter population of water in potato starch. Potato starch exhibits unique hydration properties that have not been found in cereal starches.
Asunto(s)
Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Solanum tuberosum , Almidón/química , Fenómenos Químicos , Química Física , Deuterio , Estructura MolecularRESUMEN
A review of recent studies of molecular dynamics of water in foods and model systems is presented, and the theoretical results are compared with experimental data obtained by several techniques. Both theoretical and experimental approaches are discussed for electrolytes, carbohydrates, and food proteins in solution. Theoretical results from Monte Carlo simulations are compared with experimental NMR relaxation data for quadrupolar nuclei such as those of deuterium and oxygen-17. Hydration studies of wheat, soybean, corn, and myofibrillar proteins by multinuclear spin relaxation techniques are discussed, and several new approaches to the analysis of the experimental data are considered. Correlation times of water motions in hydrated food systems are determined from NMR and dielectric relaxation data. The values of the correlation times for dilute solutions of electrolytes and carbohydrates estimated by NMR are in good agreement with those calculated from dielectric relaxation data, but seem to differ significantly from those proposed from Monte Carlo simulations. Several new and important results concerning the hydration of potato and cereal starches are presented, showing the very different hydration behaviors of these two major groups of starches. The combination of molecular dynamics computations with NMR relaxation techniques will hopefully stimulate novel technological developments in food engineering based on such fundamental studies.
Asunto(s)
Alimentos , Modelos Moleculares , Agua/química , Carbohidratos/química , Fenómenos Químicos , Química Física , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Proteínas/químicaRESUMEN
An overview of the applications of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) techniques in Agriculture and Food Chemistry, covering high-resolution, solid-state, pulsed gradient and two-dimensional techniques is presented. The systems investigated by such techniques range from purified proteins to mixtures, starch granules and wheat grains. Both hydration and structural/composition approaches that employ NMR techniques are discussed from the point of view of applications rather than technique development. Hydration models derived from multinuclear studies are discussed for food proteins and enzymes. The role of protein-protein interactions in the analysis of the NMR results on hydration is also discussed. Amongst the food proteins considered are: wheat gliadins, glutenins, corn zeins, soy glycinins and conglycinins, as well as muscle proteins. Several new applications and new directions of development of NMR in Agriculture and Food Chemistry are suggested, and potential practical applications are pointed out.