Abstract: | Commercial chitosans were subjected to controlled acid hydrolysis and their degrees of deacetylation (DD), molecular size and rheological flow profiles determined (pre‐ and post‐hydrolysis) by 1H‐NMR spectroscopy, high‐performance size‐exclusion chromatography and rheometry, respectively. Hydrolysis resulted in DD increases between 4 and 11%. Unhydrolysed chitosans had Mw and Mn values in the ranges 700–1200 and 130–210 kDa, respectively. Chitosan with the smallest initial molecular size averages had the smallest averages after hydrolysis; however, a chitosan with an intermediate initial molecular size proved to be most resistant to hydrolysis. Molecular size trends were paralleled by zero shear viscosity (η0) measurements determined by application of the Williamson model to rheological flow profile data. Viscosity is obviously related to molecular size, but does not necessarily reflect relative ease of hydrolysis, since specific hydrolysis conditions affect structurally similar polysaccharides in different ways (in terms of rate of depolymerisation and de‐N‐acetylation, etc), which are not simply due to differences in molecular size profiles pre‐hydrolysis. Copyright © 2005 Society of Chemical Industry |