Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.

The mechanical behavior of dough, gluten, and starch was studied in an effort to investigate whether bread dough can be treated as a two phase (starch and gluten) composite material. Mechanical loading tests revealed rate-dependent behavior for both the starch and the gluten constituents of dough. T...

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Main Authors: P. Mohammed, Mohd Afandi, Charalambides, Maria N., Tarleton, Edmund, James Gordon, Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: 2013
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/28625/1/Mechanical%20characterization%20and%20micromechanical%20modeling%20of%20bread%20dough.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/28625/
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
English
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spelling my.upm.eprints.286252015-10-28T04:29:09Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/28625/ Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough. P. Mohammed, Mohd Afandi Charalambides, Maria N. Tarleton, Edmund James Gordon, Williams The mechanical behavior of dough, gluten, and starch was studied in an effort to investigate whether bread dough can be treated as a two phase (starch and gluten) composite material. Mechanical loading tests revealed rate-dependent behavior for both the starch and the gluten constituents of dough. There is evidence from cryo-scanning electron microscopy that damage in the form of debonding between starch and gluten occurs when the sample is stretched. In addition, the Lodge material model was found to deviate from the tension and shear stress-strain test data by a considerably larger amount than from the compression test data. This could indicate that “damage” is dominant along the gluten-starch interface, causing debonding; the latter occurs less under compression loading, but is more prevalent in tension and shear loading. A single-particle finite element model was developed using starch as a filler contained in a gluten matrix. The interface between starch and gluten was modeled using cohesive zone elements with damage/debonding occurring under opening/tension and sliding/shear modes. The numerical results are compared to experimental stress-strain data obtained at various loading conditions. A comparison of stress-strain curves obtained from 2D and 3D single-particle models and a 2D multiparticle model led to good agreement, indicating that the single-particle model can be used to adequately represent the microstructure of the dough studied here. 2013 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/28625/1/Mechanical%20characterization%20and%20micromechanical%20modeling%20of%20bread%20dough.pdf P. Mohammed, Mohd Afandi and Charalambides, Maria N. and Tarleton, Edmund and James Gordon, Williams (2013) Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough. Journal of Rheology, 57 (1). pp. 249-272. ISSN 0148-6055 10.1122/1.4768463 English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
description The mechanical behavior of dough, gluten, and starch was studied in an effort to investigate whether bread dough can be treated as a two phase (starch and gluten) composite material. Mechanical loading tests revealed rate-dependent behavior for both the starch and the gluten constituents of dough. There is evidence from cryo-scanning electron microscopy that damage in the form of debonding between starch and gluten occurs when the sample is stretched. In addition, the Lodge material model was found to deviate from the tension and shear stress-strain test data by a considerably larger amount than from the compression test data. This could indicate that “damage” is dominant along the gluten-starch interface, causing debonding; the latter occurs less under compression loading, but is more prevalent in tension and shear loading. A single-particle finite element model was developed using starch as a filler contained in a gluten matrix. The interface between starch and gluten was modeled using cohesive zone elements with damage/debonding occurring under opening/tension and sliding/shear modes. The numerical results are compared to experimental stress-strain data obtained at various loading conditions. A comparison of stress-strain curves obtained from 2D and 3D single-particle models and a 2D multiparticle model led to good agreement, indicating that the single-particle model can be used to adequately represent the microstructure of the dough studied here.
format Article
author P. Mohammed, Mohd Afandi
Charalambides, Maria N.
Tarleton, Edmund
James Gordon, Williams
spellingShingle P. Mohammed, Mohd Afandi
Charalambides, Maria N.
Tarleton, Edmund
James Gordon, Williams
Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.
author_facet P. Mohammed, Mohd Afandi
Charalambides, Maria N.
Tarleton, Edmund
James Gordon, Williams
author_sort P. Mohammed, Mohd Afandi
title Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.
title_short Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.
title_full Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.
title_fullStr Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.
title_sort mechanical characterization and micromechanical modeling of bread dough.
publishDate 2013
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/28625/1/Mechanical%20characterization%20and%20micromechanical%20modeling%20of%20bread%20dough.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/28625/
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