1 / 44

Physical States of Water

Physical States of Water. Vapor Liquid: interaction with food components Hydrogen bonding Covalent bonding Salt linkages Van der waal interactions Ice. Crystallization of Water. Nucleation: formation of crystalline nuclei

fayola
Download Presentation

Physical States of Water

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Physical States of Water • Vapor • Liquid: interaction with food components • Hydrogen bonding • Covalent bonding • Salt linkages • Van der waal interactions • Ice

  2. Crystallization of Water • Nucleation: formation of crystalline nuclei • Low temperature and fast rate are important for the size and number • Crystal growth • Small with low temperature • Large at high temperatures • Recrystallization • Problems with freeze-thaw cycles (e.g., frozen foods)

  3. Decompartmentalization Problems of Crystal Growth • Large crystals are more stable than small ones • Small crystals melt and water used for growth of large crystals • Tissues can rupture with crystal growth • Physical changes • Enzyme activation • Chemical destruction • Storage is important

  4. Freezing Property Changes • Changes in pH (due to salt precipitation) • Increase in ionic strength • Increase in viscosity • Increase in osmotic pressure • Decrease in vapor pressure • Decrease in freezing point • Increase in surface potential • Change in oxidation-reduction potential

  5. Changes in pH Upon Freezing(e.g., phosphate buffer) • Monobasic: MH2PO4 (acidic) • When M = Na+, this form precipitates first and the pH increases • Dibasic: M2HPO4 (basic) • When M = K+, this form precipitates first and the pH decreases Changes in pH, brought about by freezing can affect biochemical and chemical reactions, and microbial growth

  6. Water Activity (aw) • The amount of water available (unbound) for chemical and biochemical reactions, and for microbial growth to occur. • Knowledge of water activity allows us to make predictions about food quality. • Processing • freezing, dehydration, concentration, salting, sugaring)

  7. Water Activity • Determines direction of moisture transfer • Most reaction rates increase with increasing water activity • Most rates correlate better with water activity than moisture content • Moisture sorption isotherms are useful

  8. For an ideal solution: n1 p ERH n1 + n2 p0 100 n1 = moles of solvent (water) n2 = moles of solute p = vapor pressure of solution p0 = vapor pressure of solvent ERH = equilibrium relative humidity aw = = = Water Activity (aw) Definition

  9. Water Activity of Selected Foods Food Product aw

  10. Type I: tightly bound H2O (monolayer) Type II: hard to remove H2O (H-bonding) Type III: loosely bound H2O (available) Moisture content aw Moisture Sorption Isotherm

  11. Instruments to Measure Water Activity

  12. Experimental Determination of aw

  13. Hysteresis: loss of H20 binding sites Hysteresis

  14. Effect of Temperature on the Sorption Isotherm

  15. Moisture Equilibration Between Components (Water Migration) • Consider products with more than one component • Oreo cookie, Twinkies, Pizza with the works

  16. Factors Influencing Water Activity • Solute interactions • Capillary suction forces • Surface force interactions

  17. Control of aw in Foods • Understand moisture sorption isotherms • Equilibrate with atmosphere of lower or higher equilibrium relative humidity (ERH) • Formulation approaches • Add solute(s) (e.g., humectants) • Anticaking agents (e.g., calcium silicate) • Remove or add water • Packaging approaches • Select to minimize water permeation • Resealable packages • Handling instructions • Change temperature

  18. Solutes and Humectants • Sodium chloride • Sugars (e.g., sucrose, glucose, fructose) • Sorbitol • Glycerol • Propylene glycol

  19. Halophilic- likes a salty environment Xerophilic- likes a dry environment Osmophilic- likes high osmotic pressure

More Related