Abstract:
Starch is used in the food industry for many applications, for example, as a thickener and
stabiliser. Novel uses of starch include making biodegradable plastic materials. These are
environmentally friendly alternatives as they have a lower carbon footprint than synthetic
plastics. However, starch plastics have poor mechanical and water vapour barrier properties,
and as such have limited applications. Several researchers have noted that modification of
starches can result in plastics with increased performance. Some modifications include the
additions of filler material, which is thought to improve starch plastic’s performance. Filler
materials can include materials such as inorganic clays (kaolin, montmorillonite and
sepiolite). An alternative material can be naturally occurring amylose-lipid complexes. These
complexes can be made by modifying starch, such as wheat starch, with lipid material, such
as stearic acid. This project investigated the effect of making plastic materials from wheat
starch modified with stearic acid after different pasting times to produce modified starch with
amylose-lipid complexes. The plastic's mechanical, thermal and barrier properties are
determined. The work also investigated the effect of adding amylose-lipid nanomaterial to
wheat starch films and determined the plastic's mechanical, thermal and barrier properties.
Wheat starch was modified, with 0.5% and 1.5% stearic acid, and films were then made from
the modified wheat starch after pasting with a RVA (Rapid Visco-Analyser). After 30
minutes pasting time, the wheat starch films modified with 0.5% stearic acid resulted in
significantly increased tensile properties compared to the other films, including maximum
stress and strain as well as stress at break. These films also showed lower oxygen and water
vapour permeability. However, when starch films were made with modified wheat starch
during pasting for 120 minutes, a lower tensile stress and higher water vapour and oxygen
permeability was obtained. The differences can be attributed to amorphous amylose-lipid
complexes formed in situ during short (30 minutes) pasting compared to semi-crystalline
amylose-lipid complexes formed during extended (120 minutes). The semi-crystalline
amylose-lipid complexes can act as weak point and pin holes for crack initiation and
propagation. The presence of amorphous amylose-lipid complexes in the films was suggested
to be the main factor that increased the films’ tensile properties. In addition, when amylose
takes part in complexation with stearic acid, it is not available to form junction zones for
network development. Consequently, weaker films are formed. Amylose-lipid material was isolated from wheat starch that had been modified with stearic
acid. This was then characterised to ensure that the isolated material was in fact amylose-lipid
material. The amylose-lipid material was found to exist at nano-scale. These nanomaterials
were then added to wheat starch paste and films were made. Wheat starch films made with
5% amylose-lipid nanomaterial addition resulted in the highest increases in the films’ tensile
properties in terms of the tensile stress and modulus, increased barrier properties in terms of
water vapour and oxygen, and most stable thermal properties in terms of glass transition and
dynamic mechanical thermal analysis. It was suggested that there is an interaction between
the amylose-lipids materials and wheat starch polymers which improved the mechanical
properties. The improved mechanical property is thought to arise from the amylose-lipid
nanomaterial having acted as a nano filler. By acting as a filler, the nanomaterial provided a
tortuous pathway which increased the oxygen and water vapour barrier properties.
Amylose-lipid complexes formed in situ during wheat starch pasting with stearic acid or
through exogenous addition of amylose-lipid complexes have the potential to improve
biodegradable wheat starch films.