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DOI: 10.1094/CC-82-0565
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ARTICLE
Effect of Microwave Heating of Kafirin on the Functional Properties of Kafirin
Films.
Yusuf B. Byaruhanga (1–3), Corinda Erasmus (2), and John R. N.
Taylor (3,4). (1) Department of Food Science and Technology, Makerere
University, PO Box 7062, Kampala, Uganda. (2) Food Science and Technology
Programme, CSIR Bio/Chemtek, PO Box 395, Pretoria 0001, South Africa. (3)
Department of Food Science, University of Pretoria, Pretoria 0002, South Africa.
(4) Corresponding author. Phone: +27 12 420 4296. Fax: +27 12 420 2839. E-mail:
<jtaylor@postino.up.ac.za> Cereal Chem. 82(5):565-573. Accepted April 29, 2005.
Copyright 2005 AACC International, Inc.
To improve the functional properties of cast kafirin films, dry kafirin,
extracted with an aqueous ethanol-based solvent at 70°C, was microwave-heated.
No effect on film tensile properties was found. Two strategies were employed to
improve the effect of microwaving: extraction of kafirin using an aqueous
tert-butanol-based solvent at ambient temperature to minimize
temperature-induced denaturation and wetting the kafirin to increase its
dielectric properties. Microwave heating this kafirin to 90 or 96°C and holding
for 1–2 min more than doubled maximum tensile strength and Young’s modulus,
and decreased strain by about one-third compared with films made from
nonmicrowaved kafirin. Film water vapor permeability was reduced by at least
one-third. Digestibility of microwaved kafirin and films was also substantially
decreased, and film biodegradability was slowed slightly. Microwave heating gave
a film microstructure with fewer and smaller size pores. SDS-PAGE showed
microwave-induced intermolecular cross-linking of the kafirin monomers, which
was possibly responsible for the modification of film properties. Microwave
heating of kafirin can be used to modify kafirin film properties, but the
kafirin must be microwaved wet and be as close as possible to its native state.
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