Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch

Abstract The variations in physiochemical, rheological, morphological, and thermal properties of extracted starches of two chickpea varieties (PDG‐5 and BG‐1076) were evaluated. Both the varieties resulted in starch yields 28.2–31.2 g/100 g. Amylose content was 30.2–31.2%. Morphological study by sca...

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Main Authors: Gargi Ghoshal, Kartik Kaushal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-03-01
Series:Legume Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/leg3.17
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spelling doaj-4964e7043d0548329c7fa2468bde89562021-06-24T18:55:36ZengWileyLegume Science2639-61812020-03-0121n/an/a10.1002/leg3.17Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starchGargi Ghoshal0Kartik Kaushal1Dr. S. S. Bhatnanar University Institute of Chemical Engineering & Technology Panjab University Chandigarh IndiaDr. S. S. Bhatnanar University Institute of Chemical Engineering & Technology Panjab University Chandigarh IndiaAbstract The variations in physiochemical, rheological, morphological, and thermal properties of extracted starches of two chickpea varieties (PDG‐5 and BG‐1076) were evaluated. Both the varieties resulted in starch yields 28.2–31.2 g/100 g. Amylose content was 30.2–31.2%. Morphological study by scanning electron microscopy of starches of both the varieties of chickpea revealed the presence of oval, spherical shaped granules with smooth surfaced, with mean granular length of 2 to 30 μm and width of 3 to 10 μm. Rheological properties of extracted starches at selected concentration (1–5%) were evaluated in flow viscometry and dynamic oscillatory mode to assess flow properties in terms of shear stress, shear rate, apparent viscosity, elastic, and viscous modulus. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy showed the presence of polysaccharides bands. X‐ray diffraction patterns showed that extracted starches are mixture of both A‐ and B‐type crystal. Thermal and pasting properties of chickpea starches were determined using differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and rapid visco analyzer, respectively. Onset (T0), peak (Tp), end (Tc) temperature, enthalpy of gelatinization (ΔH), peak height index, and gelatinization temperature range were measured by DSC. DSC thermograms revealed that T0, Tp, and Tc values of chickpeas were ranged from 65.6°C to 66.5°C, 69.6°C to 71.1°C, and 75.6°C to 76.2°C, respectively, whereas the corresponding enthalpy values varied between 14.8 and 15.6 J/g. The viscosity values at the peak, hold, final, breakdown, and setback viscosity for PDG‐5 variety were 2,562, 2,200, 3,646, 852, and 1,456 cP, respectively, and the corresponding values for BG 1076 were 4,848, 3,416, 6,384, 1,452, and 2,978 cP. It was observed that starches from BG‐1076 variety with low swelling power had higher solubility and pasting temperature.https://doi.org/10.1002/leg3.17alkali extractionchickpeapasting propertyrheologystarch
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gargi Ghoshal
Kartik Kaushal
spellingShingle Gargi Ghoshal
Kartik Kaushal
Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch
Legume Science
alkali extraction
chickpea
pasting property
rheology
starch
author_facet Gargi Ghoshal
Kartik Kaushal
author_sort Gargi Ghoshal
title Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch
title_short Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch
title_full Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch
title_fullStr Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch
title_full_unstemmed Extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch
title_sort extraction, characterization, physicochemical and rheological properties of two different varieties of chickpea starch
publisher Wiley
series Legume Science
issn 2639-6181
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Abstract The variations in physiochemical, rheological, morphological, and thermal properties of extracted starches of two chickpea varieties (PDG‐5 and BG‐1076) were evaluated. Both the varieties resulted in starch yields 28.2–31.2 g/100 g. Amylose content was 30.2–31.2%. Morphological study by scanning electron microscopy of starches of both the varieties of chickpea revealed the presence of oval, spherical shaped granules with smooth surfaced, with mean granular length of 2 to 30 μm and width of 3 to 10 μm. Rheological properties of extracted starches at selected concentration (1–5%) were evaluated in flow viscometry and dynamic oscillatory mode to assess flow properties in terms of shear stress, shear rate, apparent viscosity, elastic, and viscous modulus. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy showed the presence of polysaccharides bands. X‐ray diffraction patterns showed that extracted starches are mixture of both A‐ and B‐type crystal. Thermal and pasting properties of chickpea starches were determined using differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and rapid visco analyzer, respectively. Onset (T0), peak (Tp), end (Tc) temperature, enthalpy of gelatinization (ΔH), peak height index, and gelatinization temperature range were measured by DSC. DSC thermograms revealed that T0, Tp, and Tc values of chickpeas were ranged from 65.6°C to 66.5°C, 69.6°C to 71.1°C, and 75.6°C to 76.2°C, respectively, whereas the corresponding enthalpy values varied between 14.8 and 15.6 J/g. The viscosity values at the peak, hold, final, breakdown, and setback viscosity for PDG‐5 variety were 2,562, 2,200, 3,646, 852, and 1,456 cP, respectively, and the corresponding values for BG 1076 were 4,848, 3,416, 6,384, 1,452, and 2,978 cP. It was observed that starches from BG‐1076 variety with low swelling power had higher solubility and pasting temperature.
topic alkali extraction
chickpea
pasting property
rheology
starch
url https://doi.org/10.1002/leg3.17
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