Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification

Rice is an important staple food that provides dietary energy supply to almost half of the world's population. However, milling process is applied to improve many properties of rice often remove most of its nutritional contents. Rice fortification is therefore sought to improve the daily intake...

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Main Author: Bonto, Aldrin Porcioncula
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2015
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/5046
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_masteral-118842024-05-25T07:44:22Z Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification Bonto, Aldrin Porcioncula Rice is an important staple food that provides dietary energy supply to almost half of the world's population. However, milling process is applied to improve many properties of rice often remove most of its nutritional contents. Rice fortification is therefore sought to improve the daily intake of essential nutrients and address the malnutrition and other health issues of the vast majority of the human population. This study explore the morphological changes on the outer endosperm of uncooked milled rice under sonication for better understanding of its ultrastructure and to allow adsorption of vitamins on the porous surface of the grain. To observe the morphological changes of rice, rice varieties (TH82, NSIC 222, IRC10 and Malagkit) were sonicated at varying sonication time with sonication frequency maintained at 53 kHz. The sonicated rice varieties were then soaked in vitamin solution (thiamine B1, pantothenic acid B5 and pyridoxine B6) to assess the uptake capacity compared to non-sonicated rice. SEM results reveal the effects of sonication on the rice surface which cause micropore formation, cell wall exposure, and scattering of starch granules. On vitamin fortification, HPLC results show higher vitamin uptake of sonicated rice compared to non-sonicated rice (p < 0.05). The adsorption parameters show that pantothenic acid exhibits heterogeneous binding on the sonicated rice surface. Retention of thiamine in fortified sonicated rice was significantly high (93.19 %) after cooking at 125 oC. Further fortification using fat-soluble vitamins and essential minerals (such as Fe and Zn) are recommended. 2015-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/5046 Master's Theses English Animo Repository Rice--Milling Chemistry
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Rice--Milling
Chemistry
spellingShingle Rice--Milling
Chemistry
Bonto, Aldrin Porcioncula
Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification
description Rice is an important staple food that provides dietary energy supply to almost half of the world's population. However, milling process is applied to improve many properties of rice often remove most of its nutritional contents. Rice fortification is therefore sought to improve the daily intake of essential nutrients and address the malnutrition and other health issues of the vast majority of the human population. This study explore the morphological changes on the outer endosperm of uncooked milled rice under sonication for better understanding of its ultrastructure and to allow adsorption of vitamins on the porous surface of the grain. To observe the morphological changes of rice, rice varieties (TH82, NSIC 222, IRC10 and Malagkit) were sonicated at varying sonication time with sonication frequency maintained at 53 kHz. The sonicated rice varieties were then soaked in vitamin solution (thiamine B1, pantothenic acid B5 and pyridoxine B6) to assess the uptake capacity compared to non-sonicated rice. SEM results reveal the effects of sonication on the rice surface which cause micropore formation, cell wall exposure, and scattering of starch granules. On vitamin fortification, HPLC results show higher vitamin uptake of sonicated rice compared to non-sonicated rice (p < 0.05). The adsorption parameters show that pantothenic acid exhibits heterogeneous binding on the sonicated rice surface. Retention of thiamine in fortified sonicated rice was significantly high (93.19 %) after cooking at 125 oC. Further fortification using fat-soluble vitamins and essential minerals (such as Fe and Zn) are recommended.
format text
author Bonto, Aldrin Porcioncula
author_facet Bonto, Aldrin Porcioncula
author_sort Bonto, Aldrin Porcioncula
title Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification
title_short Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification
title_full Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification
title_fullStr Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification
title_full_unstemmed Ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin B uptake capacity: A new and efficient method for rice fortification
title_sort ultrasonic wave-assisted surface modification of milled rice and its vitamin b uptake capacity: a new and efficient method for rice fortification
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2015
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/5046
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