Novel Edible Films of Pectins Extracted From Low-Grade Fruits and Stalk Wastes of Sun-Dried Figs: Effects of Pectin Composition and Molecular Properties on Film Characteristics

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Date

2023

Authors

Çavdaroğlu, Elif
Büyüktaş, Duygu
Yemenicioğlu, Ahmet

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

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Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Average
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Top 10%

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Abstract

This study aimed to explore the characteristics of novel fig pectin films. For this purpose, films of crude fig pectin (CFP) extracted from low-grade sun-dried fruits and films of crude (CSP) and purified (PSP) stalk pectins extracted from stalk waste of processed high-quality sun-dried figs were evaluated for their physicochemical properties. The properties of pristine (CFP, CSP, and PSP films) and CaCl2 cross-linked films (CFP–Ca++, CSP-Ca++and PSP-Ca++ films) of fig pectins were also compared with films of commercial citrus (CP and CP-Ca++) and apple (AP, AP-Ca++) pectins. The cross-linking improved the mechanical strength and barrier properties of most films. CP, CP-Ca++, PSP, and PSP-Ca++ films showed greater mechanical strength and stiffness than other films. PSP-Ca++, PSP and CP-Ca++ films showed the lowest water vapor permeability (6.28, 12.85, 14.96 g.mm.m−2.day−1.kPa−1, respectively) while CSP-Ca++, CP-Ca++, CP, PSP-Ca++ films showed the lowest oxygen permeability coefficients (5403, 8265, 10776, 11124 mL.μm.m−2.24h−1.atm−1, respectively). All cross-linked fig pectin films showed 2–3 fold lower degree of swelling than CP-Ca++ film. The CFP-Ca++ film showed the highest surface hydrophobicity (contact angle = 101.8°) but the lowest water solubility (32.8%) and degree of swelling. Analysis of Pearson's correlations between pectin properties and film characteristics revealed that galacturonic acid (GA) content affects the mechanical properties, while GA content, degree of esterification (DE), and acetylation affect the moisture barrier performance; finally, GA content and DE affect the oxygen barrier performance of pectin films. Films of stalk waste pectins showed some properties beyond the limits of those obtained from commercial pectins.

Description

Keywords

Barrier properties, Citrus pectin, Cross-linking, Fig pectin, Edible films, Fig pectin; Citrus pectin; Edible film; Cross-linking; Barrier properties; Mechanical properties

Fields of Science

0404 agricultural biotechnology, 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
26

Source

Food Hydrocolloids

Volume

135

Issue

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End Page

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Citations

CrossRef : 36

Scopus : 41

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 77

SCOPUS™ Citations

41

checked on Apr 27, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

39

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Page Views

562

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Downloads

110

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