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Publication no. C-2003-1110-01R
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ARTICLE
Plasticizers for Zein: Their Effect on Tensile Properties and Water
Absorption of Zein Films.
J. W. Lawton (1). (1) Plant Polymer Research Unit,
National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, U. S. Department of
Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, 1815 N. University St., Peoria, IL
61604. Phone: 309-681-6419. Fax: 309-681-6691. E-mail: <lawtonjw@ncaur.usda.gov>
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. Cereal Chem. 81(1):1-5. Accepted August 4, 2003. 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., 2004.
Cast zein films are brittle at room conditions, so plasticizers are added to
make them more flexible. The tensile properties of these films are known to be
affected by the relative humidity (RH) of the ambient air. However, little is
known about how the plasticizers are affected by RH. Cast zein films were
plasticized with either glycerol (GLY), triethylene glycol (TEG), dibutyl
tartrate (DBT), levulinic acid (LA), polyethylene glycol 300 (PEG), or oleic
acid (OA). Mechanical properties and moisture content (MC) of the films were
measured after one week of storage at 3, 20, 50, 70, 81, and 93% RH. The
relative humidity of the films’ storage had a great effect on the films’
tensile properties. All the films’ tensile strength and Young’s modulus
values decreased as RH increased. Films containing DBT, TEG, LA, or PEG showed
an increase in the percent elongation with increasing RH. Films containing GLY,
OA, or no plasticizer did not show any increase in percent elongation as RH
increased. The changes seen in tensile properties with increasing RH are because
of zein’s hygroscopic nature. The absorbed water will further plasticize the
zein. The type of plasticizer used determined the extent of the changes seen in
the tensile properties of films stored at different RH values. Depending on the
plasticizers used in the film, there were large differences in the amount of
water absorbed. Films increasingly absorbed water depending on the plasticizer
they contained in the order GLY > TEG > LA > PEG > NONE > DBT
> OA. Films containing hygroscopic plasticizers like TEG absorbed too much
water at high RH and became weak, but they absorbed enough water at lower RH
values to not be brittle. While films containing the more hydrophobic
plasticizer DBT were brittle at intermediate RH values, they had good mechanical
properties at high RH values.
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