Options
Tracking structural changes in lipid-based multicomponent food materials due to oil migration by microfocus small-angle X-ray scattering
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Publikationsdatum
2015-05-13
Sprache
English
Enthalten in
Volume
7
Issue
18
Start Page
9929
End Page
9936
Citation
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces 7 (18) : 9929-9936 (2015-05-13)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
PubMed ID
25894460
One of the major problems in the confectionery industry is chocolate fat blooming, that is, the formation of white defects on the chocolate surface due to fat crystals. Nevertheless, the mechanism responsible for the formation of chocolate fat blooming is not fully understood yet. Chocolate blooming is often related to the migration of lipids to the surface followed by subsequent recrystallization. Here, the migration pathway of oil into a cocoa butter matrix with different dispersed particles was investigated by employing microfocus small-angle X-ray scattering and contact angle measurements. Our results showed that the chocolate powders get wet by the oil during the migration process and that the oil is migrating into the pores within seconds. Subsequently, cocoa butter is dissolved by the oil, and thus, its characteristic crystalline structure is lost. The chemical process provoked by the dissolution is also reflected by microscopical changes of the surface morphology of chocolate model samples after several hours from the addition of oil to the sample. Finally, the surface morphology was investigated before and after oil droplet exposure and compared to that of water exposure, whereby water seems to physically migrate through the particles, namely cocoa powder, sucrose, and milk powder, which dissolve in the presence of water.
Schlagworte
chocolate
microstructure
migration
synchrotron
μSAXS