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Gluten–starch interface characteristics and wheat dough rheology—Insights from hybrid artificial systems
Authors:Silvia Brandner  Thomas Becker  Mario Jekle
Affiliation:1. Research Group Cereal Process Engineering and Technology, Institute of Brewing and Beverage Technology, Technical University of Munich, Freising, Germany;2. Research Group Cereal Process Engineering and Technology, Institute of Brewing and Beverage Technology, Technical University of Munich, Freising, Germany

Contribution: Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing;3. Research Group Cereal Process Engineering and Technology, Institute of Brewing and Beverage Technology, Technical University of Munich, Freising, Germany

Department of Plant-Based Foods, Institute of Food Science and Biotechnology, University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany

Contribution: Conceptualization (equal), Supervision (equal), Validation (equal), Writing - review & editing (equal)

Abstract:Referring to the total surface existing in wheat dough, gluten–starch interfaces are a major component. However, their impact on dough rheology is largely unclear. Common viewpoints, based on starch surface modifications or reconstitution experiments, failed to show unambiguous relations of interface characteristics and dough rheology. Observing hybrid artificial dough systems with defined particle surface functionalization gives a new perspective. Since surface functionalization standardizes particle–polymer interfaces, the impact on rheology becomes clearly transferable and thus, contributes to a better understanding of gluten–starch interfaces. Based on this perspective, the effect of particle/starch surface functionality is discussed in relation to the rheological properties of natural wheat dough and modified gluten–starch systems. A competitive relation of starch and gluten for intermolecular interactions with the network-forming polymer becomes apparent during network development by adsorption phenomena. This gluten–starch adhesiveness delays the beginning of non-linearity under large deformations, thus contributing to a high deformability of dough. Consequently, starch surface functionality affects the mechanical properties, starting from network formation and ending with the thermal fixation of structure.
Keywords:artificial dough  network formation  particle–polymer interface  small-/large-scale deformation
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