Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties. / Sharan, Siddharth; Zotzel, Jens; Stadtmüller, Johannes; Bonerz, Daniel; Aschoff, Julian; Olsen, Karsten; Rinnan, Åsmund; Saint-Eve, Anne; Maillard, Marie Noëlle; Orlien, Vibeke.

In: Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies, Vol. 81, 103142, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sharan, S, Zotzel, J, Stadtmüller, J, Bonerz, D, Aschoff, J, Olsen, K, Rinnan, Å, Saint-Eve, A, Maillard, MN & Orlien, V 2022, 'Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties', Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies, vol. 81, 103142. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ifset.2022.103142

APA

Sharan, S., Zotzel, J., Stadtmüller, J., Bonerz, D., Aschoff, J., Olsen, K., Rinnan, Å., Saint-Eve, A., Maillard, M. N., & Orlien, V. (2022). Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties. Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies, 81, [103142]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ifset.2022.103142

Vancouver

Sharan S, Zotzel J, Stadtmüller J, Bonerz D, Aschoff J, Olsen K et al. Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties. Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies. 2022;81. 103142. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ifset.2022.103142

Author

Sharan, Siddharth ; Zotzel, Jens ; Stadtmüller, Johannes ; Bonerz, Daniel ; Aschoff, Julian ; Olsen, Karsten ; Rinnan, Åsmund ; Saint-Eve, Anne ; Maillard, Marie Noëlle ; Orlien, Vibeke. / Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties. In: Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies. 2022 ; Vol. 81.

Bibtex

@article{ad232f9440ba4f8c8f616769f2fc56f3,
title = "Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties",
abstract = "Fava bean (Vicia faba L.) is a promising source of proteins and has a potential in industrial food applications. Processing of fava ingredients modifies proteins and their functional properties. This study established the complexity of the relationship between fava protein-associated reactions (protein hydrolysis and aggregation), physico-chemical properties (electric charge, solubility, and intrinsic fluorescence, thermal integrity) and functional properties (foam and emulsion). For this study, an air-classified fava protein concentrate (65% w/w protein d.b.) was processed using pH (2, 4, 6.4 and 11), temperature (55, 75 and 95 °C) and duration of treatment (30 and 360 min) to produce 36 modified fava concentrates. Processing resulted in protein hydrolysis at pH < 4, and protein aggregation at pH ≥ 6.4 at temperatures above 75 °C, which influenced foaming and emulsification distinctly owing to the differences in their stabilizing mechanisms. Despite these modifications, their physico-chemical and functional properties were primarily governed by the beverage application pH. The surprising interplay shown between properties encourages the need to dive further into the different protein/non-protein reaction and interactions that can occur in fava concentrate. Industrial relevance: The functionalities of fava bean protein-rich ingredients were investigated in industrial beverage application systems (pH 4 and 7) after industrial relevant process conditions (pH: 2, 4, 6.4 and 11; temperature: 55, 75 and 95 °C, treatment duration: 30 and 360 min). Foam capacity (>100%) was very high for all ingredients at both pH applications (acidic or pH 4, and neutral or pH 7), while the foam stability changed according to the application pH. So-called foam-breakers were discovered in acidic application, while all ingredients maintained high stability in neutral applications. A similar instability was found for emulsification, since emulsion made with all ingredients in acidic application creamed immediately after production. Emulsions in neutral applications were homogenous with all ingredients, thus, emulsion capacities were equivalent to each other, but the storage stability was affected by the ingredient processing pH.",
keywords = "Aggregation, Emulsification, Foaming, Hydrolysis, Modification, Protein functionality",
author = "Siddharth Sharan and Jens Zotzel and Johannes Stadtm{\"u}ller and Daniel Bonerz and Julian Aschoff and Karsten Olsen and {\AA}smund Rinnan and Anne Saint-Eve and Maillard, {Marie No{\"e}lle} and Vibeke Orlien",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1016/j.ifset.2022.103142",
language = "English",
volume = "81",
journal = "Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies",
issn = "1466-8564",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effect of industrial process conditions of fava bean (Vicia faba L.) concentrates on physico-chemical and functional properties

AU - Sharan, Siddharth

AU - Zotzel, Jens

AU - Stadtmüller, Johannes

AU - Bonerz, Daniel

AU - Aschoff, Julian

AU - Olsen, Karsten

AU - Rinnan, Åsmund

AU - Saint-Eve, Anne

AU - Maillard, Marie Noëlle

AU - Orlien, Vibeke

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Fava bean (Vicia faba L.) is a promising source of proteins and has a potential in industrial food applications. Processing of fava ingredients modifies proteins and their functional properties. This study established the complexity of the relationship between fava protein-associated reactions (protein hydrolysis and aggregation), physico-chemical properties (electric charge, solubility, and intrinsic fluorescence, thermal integrity) and functional properties (foam and emulsion). For this study, an air-classified fava protein concentrate (65% w/w protein d.b.) was processed using pH (2, 4, 6.4 and 11), temperature (55, 75 and 95 °C) and duration of treatment (30 and 360 min) to produce 36 modified fava concentrates. Processing resulted in protein hydrolysis at pH < 4, and protein aggregation at pH ≥ 6.4 at temperatures above 75 °C, which influenced foaming and emulsification distinctly owing to the differences in their stabilizing mechanisms. Despite these modifications, their physico-chemical and functional properties were primarily governed by the beverage application pH. The surprising interplay shown between properties encourages the need to dive further into the different protein/non-protein reaction and interactions that can occur in fava concentrate. Industrial relevance: The functionalities of fava bean protein-rich ingredients were investigated in industrial beverage application systems (pH 4 and 7) after industrial relevant process conditions (pH: 2, 4, 6.4 and 11; temperature: 55, 75 and 95 °C, treatment duration: 30 and 360 min). Foam capacity (>100%) was very high for all ingredients at both pH applications (acidic or pH 4, and neutral or pH 7), while the foam stability changed according to the application pH. So-called foam-breakers were discovered in acidic application, while all ingredients maintained high stability in neutral applications. A similar instability was found for emulsification, since emulsion made with all ingredients in acidic application creamed immediately after production. Emulsions in neutral applications were homogenous with all ingredients, thus, emulsion capacities were equivalent to each other, but the storage stability was affected by the ingredient processing pH.

AB - Fava bean (Vicia faba L.) is a promising source of proteins and has a potential in industrial food applications. Processing of fava ingredients modifies proteins and their functional properties. This study established the complexity of the relationship between fava protein-associated reactions (protein hydrolysis and aggregation), physico-chemical properties (electric charge, solubility, and intrinsic fluorescence, thermal integrity) and functional properties (foam and emulsion). For this study, an air-classified fava protein concentrate (65% w/w protein d.b.) was processed using pH (2, 4, 6.4 and 11), temperature (55, 75 and 95 °C) and duration of treatment (30 and 360 min) to produce 36 modified fava concentrates. Processing resulted in protein hydrolysis at pH < 4, and protein aggregation at pH ≥ 6.4 at temperatures above 75 °C, which influenced foaming and emulsification distinctly owing to the differences in their stabilizing mechanisms. Despite these modifications, their physico-chemical and functional properties were primarily governed by the beverage application pH. The surprising interplay shown between properties encourages the need to dive further into the different protein/non-protein reaction and interactions that can occur in fava concentrate. Industrial relevance: The functionalities of fava bean protein-rich ingredients were investigated in industrial beverage application systems (pH 4 and 7) after industrial relevant process conditions (pH: 2, 4, 6.4 and 11; temperature: 55, 75 and 95 °C, treatment duration: 30 and 360 min). Foam capacity (>100%) was very high for all ingredients at both pH applications (acidic or pH 4, and neutral or pH 7), while the foam stability changed according to the application pH. So-called foam-breakers were discovered in acidic application, while all ingredients maintained high stability in neutral applications. A similar instability was found for emulsification, since emulsion made with all ingredients in acidic application creamed immediately after production. Emulsions in neutral applications were homogenous with all ingredients, thus, emulsion capacities were equivalent to each other, but the storage stability was affected by the ingredient processing pH.

KW - Aggregation

KW - Emulsification

KW - Foaming

KW - Hydrolysis

KW - Modification

KW - Protein functionality

U2 - 10.1016/j.ifset.2022.103142

DO - 10.1016/j.ifset.2022.103142

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85139239097

VL - 81

JO - Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies

JF - Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies

SN - 1466-8564

M1 - 103142

ER -

ID: 324311386