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Rice Starch Diversity: Effects on Structural,Morphological, Thermal,and Physicochemical Properties—A Review
Authors:Ali Abas Wani  Preeti Singh  Manzoor Ahmad Shah  Ute Schweiggert‐Weisz  Khalid Gul  Idrees Ahmed Wani
Affiliation:Authors Ali Abas Wani, Shah, and Idrees Ahmed Wani are with Dept. of Food Technology, Islamic Univ. of Science and Technology, Awantipora, Jammu and Kashmir 192122, India. Authors Ali Abas Wani, Singh, and Schweiggert‐Weisz are with Fraunhofer Inst. of Process Engineering and Packaging IVV, Freising 85354, Germany. Author Ali Abas Wani and Singh are also with Chair of Food Packaging Technology, Technical Univ. of Munich, Freising, Weinstephan 85354, Germany. Author Gul is with Dept. of Food Engineering and Technology, Sant Longowal Inst. of Engineering and Technology, Longowal, Punjab 148106, India. Direct inquiries to author Ali Abas Wani/Preeti Singh (E‐mail: ali.abbas.wani@gmail.com or preeti_ndri@rediffmail.com)
Abstract:Abstract: Rice starch is one of the major cereal starches with novel functional properties. Significant progress has been made in recent years on the characterization of rice starches separated from different rice cultivars. Studies have revealed that the molecular structure and functional properties are affected by rice germplasm, isolation procedure, climate, agronomic conditions, and grain development. Morphological studies (microscopy and particle size analysis) have reflected significant differences among rice starch granule shapes (polyhedral, irregular) and in granule size (2 to 7 μm). Nonwaxy and long‐grain rice starches show greater variation in granular size than the waxy starches. Rice starch granules are smaller than other cereal starches with amylose contents varying from virtually amylose‐free in waxy to about 35% in nonwaxy and long‐grain rice starches. Amylose content appears to be the major factor controlling almost all physicochemical properties of rice starch due to its influence on pasting, gelatinization, retrogradation, syneresis, and other functional properties. Waxy rice starches have high swelling and solubility parameters, and larger relative crystallinity values than nonwaxy and long‐grain starches. However, nonwaxy rice starches have a higher gelatinization temperature than the waxy and long‐grain starches. The bland taste, nonallergenicity, and smooth, creamy, and spreadable characteristics of rice starch make it unique and valuable in food and pharmaceutical applications. This review provides recent information on the variation in the molecular structure and functional properties of different rice starches.
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