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Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond water activity: recent advances based on an alternative approach to the assessment of food quality and safety

L Slade, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1991 - 
- Vol. 30, pp 115-360
TLDR
The effects of water, as a near-universal solvent and plasticizer, on the behavior of polymeric (as well as oligomeric and monomeric) food materials and systems, are reviewed, with emphasis on the impact of water content (in terms of increasing system mobility and eventual water "availability") on food quality, safety, stability, and technological performance.
Abstract
Water, the most abundant constituent of natural foods, is a ubiquitous plasticizer of most natural and fabricated food ingredients and products. Many of the new concepts and developments in modern food science and technology revolve around the role of water, and its manipulation, in food manufacturing, processing, and preservation. This article reviews the effects of water, as a near-universal solvent and plasticizer, on the behavior of polymeric (as well as oligomeric and monomeric) food materials and systems, with emphasis on the impact of water content (in terms of increasing system mobility and eventual water "availability") on food quality, safety, stability, and technological performance. This review describes a new perspective on moisture management, an old and established discipline now evolving to a theoretical basis of fundamental structure-property principles from the field of synthetic polymer science, including the innovative concepts of "water dynamics" and "glass dynamics". These integrated concepts focus on the non-equilibrium nature of all "real world" food products and processes, and stress the importance to successful moisture management of the maintenance of food systems in kinetically metastable, dynamically constrained glassy states rather than equilibrium thermodynamic phases. The understanding derived from this "food polymer science" approach to water relationships in foods has led to new insights and advances beyond the limited applicability of traditional concepts involving water activity. This article is neither a conventional nor comprehensive review of water activity, but rather a critical overview that presents and discusses current, usable information on moisture management theory, research, and practice applicable to food systems covering the broadest ranges of moisture content and processing/storage temperature conditions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Desiccation tolerance of prokaryotes.

TL;DR: The present review considers a number of the features that appear to be critical to the withstanding of a long-term water deficit, including the elaboration of a conspicuous extracellular glycan, synthesis of abundant UV-absorbing pigments, and maintenance of protein stability and structural integrity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hot air and freeze-drying of high-value foods: a review.

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of both preservation processes, hot air and freeze-drying, was done taking into account several important characteristics such as shrinkage, glass transition temperature, process-quality interaction, drying kinetics, costs and new improvements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sorbitol- vs Glycerol-Plasticized Whey Protein Edible Films: Integrated Oxygen Permeability and Tensile Property Evaluation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the properties of rubber latex blankets and rubber latex cloth with different acids (citric, formic, acetic acids and sulfur concentrations) in terms of their properties of color, elasticity and impurity content.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bread Staling: Molecular Basis and Control.

TL;DR: The most plausible hypothesis is that retrogradation of amylopectin occurs, and because water molecules are incorporated into the crystallites, the distribution of water is shifted from gluten to starch/amylopECTin, thereby changing the nature of the gluten network.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melting and glass transitions of low molecular weight carbohydrates

TL;DR: In this article, the glass transition temperatures at various water contents (Tg) and in maximally freeze-concentrated solutions (T′g), fusion temperatures (melting points, Tf), and heats of fusion (ΔHf) were determined for pentoses, hexoses, disaccharides, and alditols, using differential scanning calorimetry.
References
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Book

Viscoelastic properties of polymers

John D. Ferry
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the nature of Viscoelastic behavior of polymeric systems and approximate relations among the linear Viscoels and approximate interrelations among the Viscelastic Functions.
Book

Introduction to physical polymer science

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model for the behavior of polymers in the Liquid Crystalline State (LCS) and the Amorphous State (ACS).
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