Abstract

The effects of microwave combined with L-malic acid treatment on the degree of substitution (DS), structure, physicochemical properties, and digestibility of sweet potato starch (A-type), potato starch (B-type), and pea starch (C-type) were evaluated. The order of DS obtained was: DSM-POS > DSM-SPS > DSM-PES. Fourier transform-infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) showed that the obtained modified starch produced a new absorption band at 1735 cm−1. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and polarized light microscopy indicated that different types of native starches exhibited different granular morphologies and appeared to have different degrees of damage, but still had polarized crosses after modification. Sweet potato starch had the smallest particle size, while potato starch had the largest. X-ray diffractometry (XRD) showed that the modified starches still retained the same crystal structure as the native starches, but the relative crystallinity decreased. The apparent viscosity and swelling power of modified starches dropped, but their water/oil holding capacity, amylose content, and resistant starch content all increased. The results demonstrate that the degree of influence on the structure, physicochemical properties, and digestibility of different starches varies under the same modification conditions.

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