## Abstract This study determined the effect of phytosterol structure, including the degree of unsaturation and the presence of an ethylidene group in the side chain, on the thermal polymerization of heated soybean oil. Indigenous tocopherols and phytosterols were removed from soybean oil by molecu
The effect of phytosterol concentration on oxidative stability and thermal polymerization of heated oils
โ Scribed by Jill K. Winkler; Kathleen Warner
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 282 KB
- Volume
- 110
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1438-7697
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
This study determined the effect of adding mixed phytosterols, at various concentrations, on the thermal polymerization and oxidative stability index (OSI) of soybean and highโoleic sunflower oils. The indigenous tocopherols and phytosterols were removed from the oils by molecular distillation. Pure phytosterols were added back to these stripped oils at concentrations of 0.25, 0.5, 1, and 2.5โ wtโ%. These oils were heated at 180โ ยฐC, and triacylglycerol dimers and polymers, fatty acid composition, and residual phytosterols were determined. Added phytosterols at 1 and 2.5% significantly decreased thermal polymerization of stripped soybean oil over 8โ h. Phytosterols at 2.5% significantly increased polymerization of stripped highโoleic sunflower oil over 12โ h. Added phytosterols did not affect the loss of polyunsaturated fatty acids in either oil. The decomposition of the added phytosterols was followed in both oils during the heating study. The loss of phytosterols in soybean oil ranged from 7 to 13%, while loss in stripped highโoleic sunflower oil ranged from 13 to 20%. Phytosterols added at 1 and 2.5% significantly decreased the OSI for stripped highโoleic sunflower oil. This research shows that added phytosterols, especially at higher concentrations, will have an impact on the thermal and oxidative stability of oils.
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Phosphorylated acylglycerols and their sdts containing nitrogen inhibit the autoxidation of rapeseed, soybean, sunflowerseed, and hydrogenated rapeseed oils, similarly as natural soybean or rapeseed phospholipid concentrates (lecithins). The activity is moderate at low concentration levels (0.02-0.1