References on Mango

A critical review on the spray drying of fruit extract: effect of additives on physicochemical properties.

Duduku Krishnaiah, Rajesh Nithyanandam, Rosalam Sarbatly

Author Affiliation: Phytochemical Laboratory, Department of Chemical Engineering, School of Engineering and Information Technology, University Malaysia Sabah, 88999 Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia.
Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition 54 : 449-473

Abstract : Spray drying accomplishes drying while particles are suspended in the air and is one method in the family of suspended particle processing systems, along with fluid-bed drying, flash drying, spray granulation, spray agglomeration, spray reaction, spray cooling, and spray absorption. This drying process is unique because it involves both particle formation and drying. The present paper reviews spray drying of fruit extracts, such as acai, acerola pomace, gac, mango, orange, cactus pear, opuntia stricta fruit, watermelon, and durian, and the effects of additives on physicochemical properties such as antioxidant activity, total carotenoid content, lycopene and ?-carotene content, hygroscopy, moisture content, volatile retention, stickiness, color, solubility, glass transition temperature, bulk density, rehydration, caking, appearance under electron microscopy, and X-ray powder diffraction. The literature clearly demonstrates that the effect of additives and encapsulation play a vital role in determining the physicochemical properties of fruit extract powder. The technical difficulties in spray drying of fruit extracts can be overcome by modifying the spray dryer design. It also reveals that spray drying is a novel technology for converting fruit extract into powder form.

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