Abstract

Mixtures of high-methoxy pectin (DE 70; 1.0 wt%; pH 3.0) with ethan-1,2-diol, glycerol, xylitol, sorbitol, glucose, fructose or sucrose at concentrations of 50, 55, 60 and 65 wt% were prepared at 95 °C and changes in storage modulus ( G′) and loss modulus ( G″) during cooling to 5 °C, heating to 90 °C and re-cooling to 5 °C (at 1 °C/min) were measured at 1 rad s −1 and 0.5% strain. In all cases, the onset temperature for gelation during cooling and the moduli recorded at 5 °C increased with increasing concentration of cosolute. Both values, however, were substantially lower for the liquid cosolutes (ethan-1,2-diol and glycerol) than for mixtures incorporating the same concentrations of the solid cosolutes. The difference is attributed to inhibition of pectin–pectin interactions by pectin–cosolute interactions, which in turn are inhibited by cosolute–cosolute interactions, these being weaker for the liquid cosolutes than for the solids (as indicated by lower melting points). On heating, there was an initial reduction in modulus, with the same temperature-course as the increase on cooling; for the solid cosolutes, this was followed by an increase attributable to hydrophobic association of methyl ester substituents. No such increase was seen with the liquid cosolutes, but differential scanning calorimetry studies showed two (reversible) thermal transitions in all cases, one over the temperature-range of the initial gelation process on cooling and the other coincident with the increase in modulus on heating in the presence of the solid cosolutes. The absence of any detectable increase in modulus on heating with the liquid cosolutes is attributed to accumulation of cosolute around the polymer chains (i.e. pectin–cosolute interactions) promoting hydrophobic association between methyl ester groups on the same chain, or within small clusters of chains, with, therefore, no contribution to network structure. At high concentrations of the solid cosolutes, the increase in modulus on heating was followed by a decrease at higher temperature; this is attributed to excessive aggregation, and was reflected in lower moduli on subsequent re-cooling to 5 °C, in contrast to the enhancement in gel strength after heating and cooling that was observed at lower concentrations of the same cosolutes.

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