The effect of sugars on the diffusion of water in starch gels: a pulsed field gradient NMR study

Abstract
The self‐diffusion coefficient of water was measured in starch–sugar–water systems of various compositions. The starch was either waxy maize or potato starch and the sugar was either sucrose or xylose. The diffusion results obtained from sugar solutions (i.e. with a zero polymer concentration) suggested that a free water behaviour should only be expected after a bilayer coverage of the sugar molecule. The presence of sugars was found to decrease considerably the translational mobility of water in starch gels. This reduction was proportional to the sugar concentration in the system but showed little dependence on the type of sugar. An attempt was made to relate the self‐diffusion coefficients of water in starch–sugar–water gels to those obtained for the individual binary systems (starch–water and sugar–water). A prediction based on the additive effects of sugar and starch only corresponded with experimental results in dilute systems.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: