Abstract

In this study, the molecular mobility of fish flesh was measured by low field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) relaxation. Sardine, tuna and mackerel were frozen at −40 °C and stored for 1 day (24 h); and then these samples were thawed at room temperature (20 °C). The relaxation of water protons in fish flesh was measured for fresh (i.e., before freezing) and multi-cycle freeze–thaw samples (i.e., up to 12 times). Three domains from different pools of protons (i.e., low-mobile, medium-mobile and high-mobile) were identified from the relaxation curve. The T 2b (low-mobile), T 21 (medium-mobile) and T 22 (high-mobile) indicated the proton populations in the protein molecules, strongly bound water molecules, and weakly bound water molecules, respectively. In all cases, the relaxation time (T 2b: sardine r = 0.736 and p < 0.01, tuna r = 0.857 and p < 0.001, mackerel r = 0.904 and p < 0.001; and T 22: sardine r = 0.956 and p < 0.0001, tuna r = 0.927 and p < 0.0001, mackerel r = 0.890 and p < 0.0001) increased with the freeze–thaw cycles and it reached a nearly constant value after 6 freeze–thaw cycles. The increased relaxation time (i.e., higher mobility) up to 6 freeze–thaw cycles could be due to the increase in proton mobility. However, relaxation time (T 21: sardine r = −0.510 and p > 0.05, tuna r = 0.162 and p > 0.5, mackerel r = 0.513 and p > 0.01) showed insignificant change with the increase of freeze–thaw cycles, which indicated minimal change in the medium-mobile protons. The results in this study revealed that the changes in proton mobility in the fish flesh during freeze–thaw cycles could be identified using T 2b and T 22 relaxation of LF-NMR.

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