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Water sorption, glass transition, and protein-stabilizing behavior of an amorphous sucrose matrix combined with various materials

✍ Scribed by Koreyoshi Imamura; Toru Yokoyama; Atsushi Fukushima; Mitsunori Kinuhata; Kazuhiro Nakanishi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
203 KB
Volume
99
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3549

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✦ Synopsis


The effects of various additives on the physical properties of an amorphous sugar matrix were compared. Amorphous, sugar-additive mixtures were prepared by freeze-drying and then rehumidified at given RHs. Sucrose and eighteen types of substances were used as the sugar and the additive, respectively, and water sorption, glass-to-rubber transition, and protein stabilization during freeze-drying for the various sucrose-additive mixtures were examined. The additives were categorized into two groups according to their effects on T g and water sorption. Presence of polysaccharides, cyclodextrins, and polymers (large-sized additives) resulted in a decrease in equilibrium water content from the ideal value calculated from individual water contents for sucrose and additive, and in contrast, low MW substances containing ionizable groups (small-ionized additives) resulted in an increase. The increase in T g by the addition of large-sized additives was significant at the additive contents >50 wt.% whereas the T g was markedly increased in the lower additive content by the addition of smallionized additives. The addition of small-ionized additives enhanced the decrease in T g with increasing water content. The protein stabilizing effect was decreased with increasing additive content in the cases of the both groups of the additives.