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Publication no. C-2002-0405-06R
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ARTICLE
Air Classification of Pin-Milled Soybean Hulls (1).
Walter J. Wolf (2), David
J. Sessa (3,4), Y. Victor Wu (5), and Arthur R. Thompson (6). (1) Presented in
part at the AACC Meeting, Charlotte, NC, October 2001. Contribution from
USDA-ARS, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria IL
61604. (2) Retired. (3) Plant Polymer Research Unit, USDA-ARS, National Center
for Agricultural Utilization Research. Names are necessary to report factually
on available data; however, the USDA neither guarantees nor warrants the
standard of the product, and the use of the name by the USDA implies no approval
of the product to the exclusion of others that may also be suitable. (4)
Corresponding author. Fax: 309-681-6686. E-mail: <sessadj@ncaur.usda.gov>
(5) Fermentation Biotechnology Research Unit, USDA-ARS, National Center for
Agricultural Utilization Research. (6) Analytical Chemistry Support Unit,
USDA-ARS, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research. Cereal Chem.
79(3):439-444. Accepted January 22, 2002. This article is in the public domain
and not copyrightable. It may be freely reprinted with customary crediting of
the source. American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc., 2002.
Commercial soybean hulls (14.6% crude protein) were pin milled and then air
classified into five fractions to determine whether the hull structure can be
disrupted and the protein constituents concentrated. The number of pin millings
had only a small effect on the weight distribution of the five fractions. After
one grinding, the sum of fractions 1 and 2 (<15-18 µm) represented
only 3% of total hulls, and on three grindings, they amounted to only 6% of the
hulls. Fraction 3 (19-24 µm) shifted from 16 to 20% with three grindings,
while fraction 4 (25-30 µm) remained unchanged at 5%. Fraction 5 (>30 µm) shifted from 75 to 69% on three pin millings to compensate for the
shifts noted in fractions 1-3. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that
fractions 1 and 2 consisted of the parenchymal cell layers (innermost portion)
of the hulls; these fractions had three times the protein content and more than
twice the amount of lipids found in the ground starting material. Fraction 3
contained many of the hourglass cells typically found in the middle layer of the
hulls plus parenchyma cell material and exhibited about twice the amount of
protein and lipid found in the starting hulls. Fraction 4 included large
hourglass cells plus globular material and contained about twice the amount of
protein and about one and one-half times the lipid of the starting material.
Fraction 5 consisted primarily of clumps of palisade cells (outer cellular
layer) adhering to each other and had a lower protein and lipid content than the
starting hulls. Thus, pin milling causes some selective disruption of the hulls
where parenchyma cell layers and hourglass cells are partially released. The
palisade cells, however, are the most difficult to disrupt and constitute the
fraction most resistant to pin milling. Our findings suggest that pin milling
soybean hulls in combination with air classification can be used to concentrate
the proteins and lipids in the fines fractions.
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