Tadworth, UK – 6th March 2012: Market leaders in temperature controlled microscopy, Linkam Scientific Instruments, have been chosen by Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile to supply a THMS350V stage to understand the frying of starch in oil and water.
At the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, a research team headed by Pedro Bouchon PhD in the Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering Department are using a Linkam THMS350V stage to examine atmospheric and vacuum frying miniaturization of starch granules in oil and water. The chemical and structural aspects of vacuum frying are still not very well understood and so further experimentation is required to understand the process. The goal of the group is to understand the role of different ingredients when they are processed under different conditions, studying the effect on micro and macro-structural properties, functionality, and the impact that these processed ingredients have on nutrition. The aim is to design and develop, based on scientific knowledge, new food matrices that fit new consumer demands for healthier, low fat snack products that also taste as good as the traditional ones.
The group are comparing the effect of vacuum and atmospheric frying using real-time hot-vacuum-stage microscopy. Isolated starch granules are examined for micro-structural changes during vacuum and heating in both oil and water. The Linkam THMS350V is mounted on an Olympus BX-61 light microscope and the samples are tested at different heating rates with different vacuum levels. Samples are totally immersed before frying, and real-time image capture is used to examine structural changes.
Micro-structural changes are indicated by swelling and gelatinization of the potato starch granules during heating at 15°C/min at atmospheric pressure. Granules start to swell at 64°C. As the temperature increases the granules start to lose their shape and at 100°C the granules begin to dehydrate due to water evaporation. The loss of birefringence of the granules indicates the onset of the gelatinization process.
Pablo Cortes, a member of Pedro Bouchon's group, described how the Linkam stage has "allowed us to understand the development of the microstructure of potato starch granules in different conditions in real time. We have studied the gelatinization process of isolated potato starch granules heated in excess water and embedded in a gluten and water matrix. This micro-structural approach has given us information of paramount importance to understand the frying and vacuum frying process."
Heating-vacuum microscopy is an essential technique to begin to understand the complex process of vacuum frying which may lead to innovative ways to prepare our food.
Visit Linkam at http://www.linkam.co.uk/ and learn about the broad range of applications in the field of temperature controlled microscopy.
The Linkam THMS350V is mounted on an Olympus BX-61 light microscope.
About Linkam Scientific Instruments
Linkam develops and manufactures a broad range of heating and freezing stages for both OEM and end users to visualize and explore materials properties. Used in conjunction with light microscopes and other forms of spectroscopy, Linkam stages are found in thousands of laboratories worldwide with the most and successful microscope heating stage, the THMS600, selling over 4,000 units alone. Linkam is the market leader in temperature controlled microscopy.
Contact details:
Linkam Scientific Instruments Limited
8 Epsom Downs Metro Centre
Waterfield
Tadworth
Surrey KT20 5HT
T +44 (0)1737 363476
http://www.linkam.co.uk/
[email protected]
[email protected]
Talking Science Limited
39 de Bohun Court
Saffron Walden
Essex CB10 2BA
T +44 (0)1799 521881
M +44 (0)7843 012997
http://www.talking-science.com/
[email protected]