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Ms Gena Nashed

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Ms Gena Nashed

PhD Student

Phone: (none)
Fax: +61 7 3365 4199
E-mail: chaheem@cheque.uq.edu.au

Academic Background

  • Bachelor of Engineering (Chemical) Hons, The University of Queensland (1998)

Research Interests

The Extrusion Cooking of Starch

Supervisors:

Starch (C6H10O5)n is one of the most abundant constituents of the human diet as it is widely used in food processing. Gelatinised starches have numerous industrial, non food uses such as in drilling oil wells, making paper and in water-base paints (Chiang and Johnson 1977) . In food, gelatinised starches are typically used as thickening agents. The gelatinisation of starch has a significant effect on the characteristics and quality of food such as texture, elasticity and softness of paste products, digestibility and stability of bread and cakes (Chiang and Johnson 1977) . There are many food processes that can gelatinise starch and one notable one is extrusion cooking.

Extrusion cooking has become one of the most popular new processes developed by the food and feed industries. Its basic principle is to convert a solid material to a fluid state by applying moisture and shear, then to extrude the material through a die to form a product of predetermined geometric and physical characteristics. Depending on the process parameters, directly expanded or non-expanded products can be obtained. This project investigates the effect of extrusion parameters on the gelatinisation of wheat starch during extrusion. Effects of moisture content, pressure, temperature, shear rate and residence time will be investigated. The effect of these parmeters on the structural, rheological and reo-optical properties of wheat starch extrudate will help understand the various physical transitions that occur.

Experiments will be carried out on a single screw and twin screw extruder. The properties of the final extrudates will be compared to help determine the effect of different screw configurations on starch extrusion.

 

 

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