Effect of spray drying conditions on the physicochemical properties and enthalpy relaxation of α-lactose

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis Inc.

Abstract

The purpose of this work was to investigate the effect of different spray drying conditions on the physicochemical properties of dried lactose. Results indicated that the feed concentration and inlet temperature, as well as storage condition, influenced the thermal properties of the dried material, which were evaluated by the degree of molecular relaxation, presumably associated to different levels of molecular mobility in the sample. It was evident that higher drying temperatures decreased molecular mobility of the dried material while increasing its glass transition and crystallization temperatures. This is most likely due to the existence of states of lower mobility within the material as those with higher mobility were relaxed. The change in heat capacity at the glass transition temperature, ΔCpTg pand the reduced crystallization temperature Tcreduced, were used to compare the crystallization tendencies of the spray dried powders. It was observed that a decrease ΔCpTg in and an increase Tcreduced in were associated with higher crystallization temperatures. On the other hand, the enthalpic relaxation ΔH relax did not change significantly with storage conditions. The findings illustrated that the initial enthalpy relaxation, which occurred during spray drying, was related to the crystallization tendencies and storage conditions. © 2014 Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

Description

Keywords

Amorphous, Enthalpy, Mdsc, Spray drying, Thermal analysis, Amorphous materials, Glass, Glass transition, Hybrid materials, Sugars, Thermoanalysis, Crystallization temperature, Crystallization tendency, Enthalpic relaxation, Enthalpy relaxation, Molecular relaxation, Physicochemical property, Spray-dried powders, Food processing, Food science

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By