What is it about?
Some types of starch (e.g. cassava and waxy maize), classified as A-type, can quickly transform into a gel state when mixed with a mixture of an ionic liquid and water in a specific ratio, even at room temperature. In contrast, the other starch types (e.g. potato and high amylose maize), classified as B-type, can hardly change under the same condition. This study has shown that for A-type starches, the ionic liquid/water mixture can penetrate into the starch granule interior, the most vulnerable part, through the granule surface pores to disrupt the granule structure, whereas B-type starches, when mechanically broken by ball milling to expose the granule interior, can still be processed by the ionic liquid/water mixture at room temperature, just like A-type starches.
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Why is it important?
The starch application requires gelating starch, namely destroying native starch granules in an aqueous environment resulting in a homogeneous gel. This usually requires heating. This can hardly be achieved even at over 100 °C for e.g. high-amylose starches. Regarding this, this research can provide insights into developing starch gelation processes with aqueous ionic liquids with reduced heating, with the benefits of easy processing and energy reduction.
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This page is a summary of: For efficient treatment of starch using aqueous ionic liquid at room temperature, Sustainable Materials and Technologies, July 2023, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.susmat.2023.e00592.
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