Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding...

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Physical properties and food dispersions

Transcript of Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding...

Page 1: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Physical properties and food dispersions

Page 2: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Binding forces

• Van der Waals

• Ionic

• Covalent

• Hydrogen bonding

Page 3: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Van der Waals bonding

+ +

Involves the attraction of one nucleus for theouter shell electrons around a different nucleus

1-3 kcal/mole

Page 4: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Van der Waals bonds• Van der Waals bonds (and hydrogen bonds)

are quite weak individually but when there are many of them they are collectively very strong. Much like the strings that bound Gulliver…

Page 5: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Ionic bonding

M+ X-

Opposite charges attract each other (Coulomb’s law)

20-30 kcal/mole

Page 6: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Covalent bonding

H3C. .CH3

A sharing of electrons between two atoms.The sharing may be equal or unequal, dependingon the atoms involved (their electronegativity).

Page 7: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Covalent bonding

H3C CH3

30-100 kcal/mole

Page 8: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Effect of electronegativity on electron distribution

Image courtesy of edie.cprost.sfu.ca/~rhlogan/covalent.html

Electronegativity: C = 2.55, Cl = 3.96

Page 9: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Hydrogen bonding

H

O

H

2-10 kcal/mole

Page 10: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Types of associations

• Hydrophilic– Water loving (polar)

• Salts, sugars, alcohols, etc.

• Hydrophobic– Water hating

• Fats, oils, waxes, hydrocarbons

Page 11: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Functions of water in foods (APK)

• A solvent for chemicals• A medium for heat transfer• A reaction medium• A chemical reactant or product• A texturizer or plasticizer• Influences food perishability

Page 12: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water activity

• Water activity = aw• aw = p/po

– where p = water vapor pressure over a food and po = water vapor pressure over pure water

• Or aw = ERH/100– where ERH = equilibrium relative humidity

Page 13: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water activity• Old concept

– Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound” water

• New concept– It is now regarded as a measure of the

energy status of water in the system– The closer the aw of a system is to 1 the

nearer the water in that system is to behaving like pure water

• This ratio affects many food properties, especially shelf life and texture

Page 14: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Look at water content

Water content =15%

Water content =7%

Which way does water move and what is the resultof that movement?

Page 15: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Based on water content

• We would predict movement of water from cake to icing until each was at about 11% water content

• The cake would dry out and the icing would become more soggy

Page 16: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Look at water activity

Aw = 0.61

Aw = 0.79

Which way does water move and what is the resultof that movement?

Page 17: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

What actually happens?

• Water will move between the frosting and cake until their water activities are equal

• This results in water moving from the frosting into the cake. The cake gets more soggy and the frosting dries out.

• This is the opposite of what you would predict based on water content

Page 18: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water activity

• Most chemical reactions stop at aw < 0.8• Bacterial growth stops at aw < 0.9• Molds and yeasts stop growing at aw <

0.8-0.88• Enzymes can’t act at aw less than 0.85

More on the importance of water activity

Page 19: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water activity

Image courtesy of www.dfst.csiro.au/water_fs.htm

Page 20: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Moisture sorption isotherms

Zone Imonolayerwater, verystronglyassociated

Zone IImultilayerwater, less stronglyassociated

Zone IIIbulk phasewater, notassociated

Page 21: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water zones analogy

Zone I = water in your skin(very tightly associated)

Zone II = water in yourswimming suit (less tightly

associated)

Zone III = water in the pool(not associated)

Page 22: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Aw is also important because it influences the rates of chemical reactions in foods

Figure from http://aqualab.decagon.com.br/educacao/measurement-of-water-activity-for-product-quality/

Page 23: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Properties of water

• Freezing point (0o C) and boiling point (100o C) are much higher than other molecules of similar molecular weight

• Due to hydrogen bonding

Page 24: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water shape and hydrogen bonding

WaterH-bonds

Page 25: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water phase diagram

At the triple point,all three phasesexist at once.

Page 26: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Properties of water (cont.)

• Density -- water is most dense at 4o C• Dipole moment -- Water has a relatively

large dipole moment, 1.82 debye. This means it interacts well with other highly polar molecules. Also, microwave cooking depends on the polarity of water.

Page 27: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Dipole moment of water

H

O

H

1.82 debye

Page 28: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Dielectric constant

• Water has a relatively high dielectric constant and is very effective at solvating highly polar things like salts

Na+ Cl-

Page 29: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Specific heat

• Water has a high specific heat, 1 cal/gram/degree C

• This is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1o C

• Easier to think of as “resistance to heat flow”– The bigger the specific heat number, the

more resistance to heat flow

Page 30: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

How do we tell we are heating something?

Temp

Time of heating

0

100

Page 31: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Latent heats (APK)

• Water has two important latent heats– Heat of fusion (Hfus)=80cal/gram

• Amount of heat needed to melt one gram of ice at 0o C to one gram of water at 0o C

– Heat of vaporization (Hvap) = 540 cal/gram• Amount of heat needed to vaporize one gram of

water at 100o C to one gram of steam at 100o C

Page 32: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Heat transfer problem

• Specific heat of water = 1 cal/gram/oC• Specific heat of steam = 0.5 cal/gram/oC• Specific heat of ice = 0.5 cal/gram/oC• For in-phase heat flows

– Q = mcT • For phase transitions

– Q = mH(vap or fus)

Page 33: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Heat transfer problem

• Given the information on the previous two slides, how much heat is required to convert 100 grams of ice at -30o C to 100 grams of steam at 110o C?

Page 34: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Heat transfer problem

Temp

Time of heating

0

100

1

1 = -30 to 0oC

2

2= melting at 0o C33 = 0o to 100o C

4

4 = vaporization at 100o C

5

5 = 100 to 110o C

Page 35: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Heat transfer problem

• 1 = (100g)(0.5cal/g/C)(30oC) = 1500 cal• 2 = (100)(80 cal/g) = 8000 cal• 3 = (100g)(1cal/g/C)(100oC) = 10,000 cal• 4 = (100g)(540 cal/g) = 54,000 cal• 5 = (100g)(0.5cal/g/C)(10oC) = 500 cal• Total = 74,000cal = 74 kcal

Page 36: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Heat transfer problem

Temp

Time of heating

0

100

1

1 = 1500 cal

2

2= 8000 cal33 = 10,000 cal

4

4 = 54,000 cal

5

5 = 500 calTotal = 74,000 cal

Page 37: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Dispersion of matter

• Classification systems– Particle size

– Physical state of the phases

• Any dispersion has at least two parts: the dispersed (discontinuous) phase and the continuous component (usually water or oil)

Page 38: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Particle size classification

• True solutions– Solutes are small molecules

• Colloidal dispersions– Solutes are large (macromolecular)

molecules• Suspensions

– Large pieces of material– Subject to gravitational settling

Page 39: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Solution colligative properties

• Vapor pressure– Lowered by solute

• Boiling point– Raised by 0.52o C/mole of dissolved solute

Page 40: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Solution colligative properties

• Freezing point– Lowered by -1.86o C/mole of dissolved solute

• Osmotic pressure– Relates to the movement of water across a

semi-permeable membrane. Movement of water (pressure) is always toward the higher concentration of solute.

Page 41: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Osmosis

Page 42: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Colloidal dispersion stabilizing factors• Brownian movement -- minor factor

• Electrical charge

• Water of hydration

Page 43: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Electrical charge

Page 44: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Electrical charge

Like charges repel

Page 45: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Water of hydration

Water of hydration physically interferes with molecular interaction

Water of hydration

Page 46: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Physical state of phase classification

Solid Liquid Gas

Solid - Sol Solidaerosol

Liquid - Emulsion -

Gas Solidfoam

Foam -

Page 47: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Examples of physical state classification foods• Sol -- protein in skim milk• Emulsion -- vinegar and oil dressing• Foam -- meringue• Solid foam -- bread, marshmallows, cakes• Solid aerosol -- smoke flavoring

Page 48: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)

oil

oil

Oil droplets wantto coalesce--reducessurface tension

Page 49: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)

oil

Page 50: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)

oil

Separates and floats to top because oildensity is less than that of water

Page 51: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)

oil

oil

To prevent phaseseparation we needan emulsifier

Page 52: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsifiers

• Emulsifiers have the following general molecular features

head Polar head, likes water

Non-polar tail, likes oil

Page 53: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)

oil

oil

What happens to thispicture when we addemulsifiers?

Page 54: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)

oil

oil

This system is stabilizeddue to a lowering ofsurface tension by the emulsifier.

Page 55: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsifier analogyProblem here? No.

Problem here? No.

Problem here? Yes!

Page 56: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsifier analogy

GoPurdue!

Nuts!!

Mr.Emulsifier

Page 57: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Emulsifiers and HLB value• Deciding which emulsifier to use is

important and depends on whether you have an o/w emulsion or a w/o emulsion.

• Generally, hydrophile-lipophilebalance values will give some guidance– HLB > 7 useful for o/w

emulsions– HLB < 7 useful for w/o

emulsions

O/W

W/O

Page 58: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

pH and foods

• pH influences– Pigment colors in meats, fruits, and

vegetables– Extent of Maillard browning– Texture in meats, fruits, and vegetables– Flavor– Enzymatic and microbial action

Page 59: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

pH definition and food rangepH = -log[H+]

Limes Egg whites

1.8 9.5

NeutralAcid Alkaline (basic)

Page 60: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

Buffers

• Buffers are mixtures of a weak acid and its salt or a weak base and its salt– These systems resist pH change– Most biological systems are buffered– Proteins are common food buffering agents

as they contain both carboxyl groups (capable of reacting with bases) and amino groups (capable of reacting with acids)

Page 61: Physical properties and food dispersions - Purdue … properties and food dispersions. Binding forces ... – Water activity was thought of as the ratio of “free” and “bound”

High acid/low acid foods

• This is extremely important in food processing (canning)– It is more difficult to kill bacteria in low acid

foods than in high acid foods– A low acid food is defined as having a pH of

greater than 4.6 and an aw of greater than 0.85

– An exception to this rule is tomatoes (pH < 4.7 are not low acid foods)