Materials Research (Feb 2016)

Water Susceptibility and Mechanical Properties of Thermoplastic Starch–Pectin Blends Reactively Extruded with Edible Citric Acid

  • Alessandra Luzia Da Róz,
  • Pricila Veiga-Santos,
  • Adriane Medeiros Ferreira,
  • Thaís Cristina Ribeiro Antunes,
  • Fabio de Lima Leite,
  • Fabio Minoru Yamaji,
  • Antonio José Felix de Carvalho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-5373-MR-2015-0215
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 138 – 142

Abstract

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Pectin and starch are edible, non-toxic, biodegradable and obtained from renewable sources. Also, have the benefit to be easily cross-linked producing hydrogels. Reactive extrusion with edible citric acid and cross linking interactions was evaluated on extruded thermoplastic in natura and cationic starch-pectin blends. Materials water susceptibility and mechanical properties were characterised. Reactive extrusion decreased (up to 75% in natura starch) mechanical properties. Also have decreased (up to 32.4%) both starch polymers water absorption, indicating the possibility of increasing materials water barrier properties but had the opposite effect on the pectin-TPS material, probably related to a cationic-anionic cross linking, resulting in a hydrogel polymer. Reactive extrusion also have negatively affected mechanical properties of both starch polymers, however increased pectin-TPS blends stress and strain at rupture.

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