首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
A total of 1,176 grain samples representing 10 different single‐ and double‐mutant genotypic classes of specialty starch corn were used for developing various classification models based on near‐infrared transmittance spectra. The genotypes used included amylose‐extender (ae), dull (du), sugary‐2 (su2), waxy (wx), ae wx, ae du, ae su2, du wx and du su2. Two‐class classification models (only two genotypes compared) were developed using partial least squares analysis (PLS) while three‐way and multiclass models were examined using principal component analysis (PCA). The effectiveness of the calibrations was evaluated by examining the percentage of unknown grain samples incorrectly classified. In general, two‐class models performed better than multiclass models. However, they did not show improvement when discriminating among genotypes with overlapping amylose contents such ae du vs. ae and ae su2 vs. ae. Three‐way models including double‐mutants and their corresponding single‐mutant counterparts had misclassification percentages typically <5% using 14 PCA factors but again, with the exception of models including genotypes with overlapping amylose contents such as ae du vs. ae vs. du. The best multiclass model using all 10 genotypic classes simultaneously revealed only two classes (ae su2 and du) with misclassification rates >10% based on 16 PCA factors. This study demonstrates that, depending on the material to be considered, near‐infrared transmittance spectroscopy could be useful when segregation of specialty starch hybrids grain from other grain types is necessary.  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of the present work was to examine whether partial acid hydrolysis (PAH) of a high‐amylose maize starch (ae‐VII) would enhance the effects of hydrothermal treatments to produce granular resistant starch (RS) that is stable to further heat treatment at atmospheric pressure. PAH ae‐VII starches were prepared by heating 35% (w/v) suspensions with 1% (w/w) HCl at 25°C for 6, 30, and 78 hr. Native and PAH starches were then treated by annealing (ANN) or heat‐moisture treatment (HMT). ANN was done at 70% moisture at 50, 60, or 70°C for 24 hr, and HMT was done at 30% moisture at 100, 120, or 140°C for 80 min. RS that survives boiling during analysis was determined by a modification of the AOAC method for determining total dietary fiber. RS was also determined by the Englyst method. Little change in the gelatinization enthalpy was found for ae‐VII starch after PAH, ANN, or HMT as individual treatments. After PAH, either ANN or HMT led to decreased gelatinization enthalpy. HMT and ANN alone increased boiling‐stable RS but decreased total RS. After PAH of ae‐VII, either ANN or HMT tended to increase the yield of boiling‐stable granular RS, with the greatest yield (≤63.2%) observed for HMT.  相似文献   

3.
Retrogradation of three high-amylose starches (HAS: ae du, ae V, and ae VII) and common corn starch (CCS) was examined by dynamic oscillatory rheometry (7.5% [w/w] starch in 20% [v/v] dimethyl sulfoxide [DMSO]), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC; 30% [w/w] starch in water), and turbidity (0.5% [w/w] starch in 20% [v/v] DMSO). Nongranular lipid-free starch and starch fractions (amylose [AM], amylopectin [AP], and intermediate material [IM]) were studied. Gels were prepared by dispersing starches or fractions in 90% DMSO and diluting with water, followed by storage for seven days at 4°C. For AM from each starch, the elastic modulus (G′) was similar when heated from 6 to 70°C. The G′ of HAS AP gels at 6°C was higher than for CCS AP gels. For nongranular CCS and ae du gels, G′ dropped dramatically (≈100×) when heated from 6 to 70°C, less (≈10×) for ae V gels, and least (≈5×) for ae VII gels. By DSC, each AM endotherm had a peak temperature of ≈140°C, whereas all AP endotherms were complete before 120°C. Endotherms >120°C were not observed for any nongranular starch despite the high AM content of some starches. After cooling starch suspensions from room temperature to 5°C and subsequent rewarming to room temperature, each AM and the ae VII nongranular starch remained highly turbid. Each AP and the remaining nongranular starches lost turbidity during rewarming. Our work suggests that branched molecules of CCS and HAS influence gel properties of nongranular starches by inhibiting or altering AM-AM interactions.  相似文献   

4.
Ten parent corn lines, including four mutants (dull sugary2, amylose‐extender sugary2, amylose‐extender dull, and an amylose‐extender with introgressed Guatemalen germplasm [GUAT ae]) and six lines with introgressed exotic germplasm backgrounds, were crossed with each other to create 20 progeny crosses to increase resistant starch (RS) as a dietary fiber in corn starch and to provide materials for thermal evaluation. The resistant starch 2 (RS2) values from the 10 parent lines were 18.3–52.2% and the values from the 20 progeny crosses were 16.6–34.0%. The %RS2 of parents was not additive in the offspring but greater RS2 in parents was correlated to greater RS2 in the progeny crosses (r = 0.63). Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measured starch thermal characteristics, revealing positive correlations of peak gelatinization temperature and change in enthalpy with %RS2 (r = 0.65 and r = 0.67, P ≤ 0.05); however, % retrogradation (a measure of RS3) and retrogradation parameters did not correlate with %RS2. The %RS2 and onset temperature increased with the addition of the ae gene, likely because RS delays gelatinization.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of partial gelatinization with and without lipid addition on the granular structure and on α‐amylolysis of large barley starch granules was studied. The extent of hydrolysis was monitored by measuring the amount of soluble carbohydrates and the amount of total and free amylose and lipids in the insoluble residue. Similarly to the α‐amylolysis of native large barley starch granules, lipid‐complexed amylose (LAM) appeared to be more resistant than free amylose and amylopectin. Partial gelatinization changed the hydrolysis pattern of large barley starch granules; the pinholes typical of α‐amylase‐treated large barley starch granules could not be seen. Lipid addition during partial gelatinization decreased the formation of soluble carbohydrates during α‐amylolysis. Also free amylose remained in the granule residues and mostly amylopectin hydrolyzed into soluble carbohydrates. These findings indicate that lysophospholipid (LPL) complexation with amylose occurred either during pretreatment or after hydrolysis, and free amylose was now part of otherwise complexed molecules instead of being separate molecules. Partial gelatinization caused the granules to swell somewhat less during heating 2% starch‐water suspensions up to 90°C, and lipid addition prevented the swelling completely. α‐Amylolysis changed the microstructure of heated suspensions. No typical twisting of the granules was seen, although the extent of swelling appeared to be similar to the reference starch. The granules with added LPL were partly fragmented after hydrolysis.  相似文献   

6.
Physical properties of resistant starch (RS) were examined in a range of barley genotypes to determine the contribution of starch and seed physical characteristics to the RS component. Thirty‐three barley genotypes were studied, which varied significantly in their RS, amylose, and starch contents and grain yield. From 33 genotypes, 13 exhibiting high RS were selected for detailed physicochemical analysis of starch. In high‐RS varieties, granule size and number were unimodal, compared with normal starches from a reference genotype, which showed a bimodal distribution. Principal component analysis (PCA) showed that a higher content of granules <15 µm was positively correlated with RS and amylose content, whereas the proportion of granules 15–45 µm was negatively correlated with the RS and amylose contents. Physical fractionation of starches by centrifugation into different population sizes demonstrated that size alone is not an accurate indicator of the population of A‐type and B‐type granules within a given genotype. PCA also showed that large 15–45 µm granules were positively correlated with seed thickness and that thousand grain weight was positively correlated with seed width. High‐RS and high‐amylose genotypes showed variation in overall yield and starch content, with some genotypes showing yield comparable to the reference genotype. Analysis of amylopectin chain length distribution showed that high amylose or RS content was not associated with a higher proportion of amylopectin long chains when compared with either waxy or reference (normal) barley genotypes. This study highlights useful markers for screening barley genotypes with favorable starch characteristics.  相似文献   

7.
Type III resistant starch (RS) is understood to be due to the ordered structure formation in the process of retrogradation. Most treatments of granular high‐amylose maize starch (HAMS) do not completely eliminate the original ordered structure. We hypothesized that residual ordered structure would constrain subsequent physical reassociation of chains and the formation of RS. The objective was to generate differences in enzyme susceptibility using two means of precipitation of fully dispersed starch and to relate differences in enzyme susceptibility to the structure of the precipitates. Dispersions in sodium hydroxide were precipitated either with ethanol or ammonium sulfate. RS and the timecourse of digestion were determined. Crystallinity and helicity were estimated using wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction and solid‐state 13C CP/MAS NMR, respectively. Precipitation of whole starch with ethanol led to lower RS values (≈24%) than precipitation with ammonium sulfate (≈39%) and also to higher reaction rate constants for an early component of digestion. Ethanol precipitation of a branched starch fraction gave essentially no RS, whereas ammonium sulfate precipitation of the same branched material had >20% RS. Ethanol precipitates contained single helices, in most but not all cases, contributing to V‐type crystallinity. Ammonium sulfate precipitates had double helices contributing to B‐type crystallinity.  相似文献   

8.
Breeding for high‐amylose corn requires a rapid analytical method for determining starch amylose so that generating wet chemistry values does not pose a major limitation in the volume of materials that can be screened. Two methods for determining apparent amylose content (AAC) were examined and compared with an iodine‐binding method involving the solubilization of isolated starch in a sodium hydroxide solution (method 1). These methods included one based on near‐infrared transmittance spectroscopy (NIRT) (method 2) and another iodine‐binding method involving the solubilizing of starch from ground whole corn with a DMSO‐iodine solution (method 3). These methods were chosen because, aside from initial set up costs, they are relatively rapid and inexpensive to perform. The materials evaluated consisted of various exotic corn populations including plant introductions and experimental materials generated from the Germplasm Enhancement of Maize (GEM) project. Crosses were made between these materials and a Corn Belt dent hybrid (OH43 × H99) converted with the amylose‐extender (ae) allele. Grain from F2 ears, presumed to be homozygous for the ae allele based on visual selection of mutant kernels on F1 ears from which they were planted, were then evaluated to identify possible modifiers of ae conditioning high starch AAC. From a total of 1,006 F2 ears, a core set consisting of 155 samples was established and only these were subjected to starch AAC analysis, using all three methods to compare the methods. Method 2 showed poor correlation to method 1 (r = 0.88), however, NIRT did appear to discriminate between samples converted to ae vs. those with a normal or possibly segregating endosperm type. Method 3 showed a slightly better correlation with method 1 (r = 0.92) and appeared to more fully discriminate among samples with AAC values >65% from those at ≈55%. Results from this study suggest that NIRT may be useful when a quick screening method is needed to discriminate mutant from nonmutant genotypes within grain samples of exotic germplasm especially when visual identification is difficult. In addition, method 3 could be used to replace the more time‐consuming method 1 when trying to identify high AAC levels among ae genotypes, even though some inconsistency was observed between the two methods. Finally, this study revealed that exotic germplasm may be an important source of new modifiers to the ae allele because values as high as 70% AAC were identified.  相似文献   

9.
High-amylose cereal starch has a great benefit on human health through its resistant starch (RS) content. Enzyme hydrolysis of native starch is very helpful in understanding the structure of starch granules and utilizing them. In this paper, native starch granules were isolated from a transgenic rice line (TRS) enriched with amylose and RS and hydrolyzed by α-amylase. Structural properties of hydrolyzed TRS starches were studied by X-ray powder diffraction, Fourier transform infrared, and differential scanning calorimetry. The A-type polymorph of TRS C-type starch was hydrolyzed faster than the B-type polymorph, but the crystallinity did not significantly change during enzyme hydrolysis. The degree of order in the external region of starch granule increased with increasing enzyme hydrolysis time. The amylose content decreased at first and then went back up during enzyme hydrolysis. The hydrolyzed starches exhibited increased onset and peak gelatinization temperatures and decreased gelatinization enthalpy on hydrolysis. These results suggested that the B-type polymorph and high amylose that formed the double helices and amylose-lipid complex increased the resistance to BAA hydrolysis. Furthermore, the spectrum results of RS from TRS native starch digested by pancreatic α-amylase and amyloglucosidase also supported the above conclusion.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of environmental temperature (21 vs. 28°C) during rice seed development on the starch characteristics (apparent amylose content, amylopectin chain length distribution, and gelatinization properties) of nonwaxy Taichung 65 (T65), waxy Taichung (T65wx), du2‐2 mutated low‐amylose strain Taichung (76‐3/T65), and Koshihikari were studied. Amylose contents increased with decreasing environmental temperatures. Analysis of the amylopectin chain length distribution showed that the relative amounts of long chains with degree of polymerization (DP) > 25 in all starches decreased if maturation occurred at 21°C. Gelatinization onset, peak, and conclusion temperatures and enthalpies decreased with decreasing environmental temperatures. Of all starches studied, the du2‐2 mutated low‐amylose Taichung (76‐3/T65) was most affected by maturation temperatures. These results indicate that the du2‐2 mutated low‐amylose Taichung (76‐3/T65) may be a useful strain in understanding biochemical and genetic starch biosynthesis response to slight changes in temperature.  相似文献   

11.
Flours of two soft wheat cultivars were fractionated into native, prime, tailing, A‐, and B‐type starch fractions. Starch fractions of each cultivar were characterized with respect to A/B‐type granule ratio, amylose content, phosphorus level (lysophospholipid), and pasting properties to investigate factors related to wheat starch pasting behavior. While both cultivars exhibited similar starch characteristics, a range of A‐type (5.7– 97.9%, db) and B‐type granule (2.1–94.3%, db) contents were observed across the five starch fractions. Though starch fractions displayed only subtle mean differences (<1%) in total amylose, they exhibited a range of mean phosphorus (446–540 μg/g), apparent amylose (18.7–23%), and lipid‐complexed amylose (2.8–7.5%) values, which were significantly correlated with their respective A‐ and B‐type granule contents. A‐type (compared with B‐type) granules exhibited lower levels of phosphorus, lipid‐complexed amylose, and apparent amylose, though variability for the latter was primarily attributed to starch lipid content. While starch phosphorus and lipid‐complexed amylose contents exhibited negative correlation with fraction pasting attributes, they did not adequately account for starch fraction pasting behavior, which was best explained by the A/B‐type granule ratio. Fraction A‐type granule content was positively correlated with starch pasting attributes, which might suggest that granule size itself could contribute to wheat starch pasting behavior.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of the present study was to investigate effects of debranching, autoclaving‐storing cycles, and drying processes (oven‐drying or freeze‐drying) on RS contents, thermal, pasting, and functional properties of high‐amylose maize starches (Hylon V and Hylon VII). The resistant starch (RS) contents increased (≤57.8%) with increasing autoclaving‐storing cycles. RS contents of oven‐dried samples were higher than those of freeze‐dried samples due to ongoing retrogradation of starch during oven drying at 50°C. Debranching caused a significant decrease in peak transition temperature and enthalpy values as compared with native starches. Solubility and water binding values of RS preparations were higher than those of native starches. Addition of native and autoclaved samples had improving effect on emulsion properties of albumin. Cold viscosity values of oven‐dried samples were lower as compared with freeze‐dried samples; this might be due to higher number of H‐bonds in the oven‐dried samples expected to be formed during drying. Debranching and autoclaving‐storing cycles caused decreases in peak, breakdown, and final viscosity values. The results of present study showed that debranching and heat treatments increased the RS contents and improved the functional properties of high‐amylose maize starches.  相似文献   

13.
Resistant starches (RS) were prepared from wheat starch and lintnerized wheat starch by autoclaving and cooling and by cross‐linking. Heat‐moisture treatment also was used on one sample to increase RS. The experimental resistant starches made from wheat starch contained 10–73% RS measured as Prosky dietary fiber, whereas two commercial resistant starches, Novelose 240 and 330, produced from high‐amylose maize starch, contained 58 and 40%, respectively. At 25°C in excess water, the experimental RS starches, except for the cross‐linked wheat starch, gained 3–6 times more water than the commercial RS starches, and at 95°C gained 2–4 times more. Cross‐linked RS4 wheat starch and Novelose 240 showed 95°C swelling powers and solubilities of 2 g/g and 1%, and 3 g/g and 2%, respectively. All starches showed similar water vapor sorption and desorption isotherms at 25°C and water activities (aw) < 0.8. At aw 0.84–0.97, the resistant starches made from wheat starch, except the cross‐linked wheat starch, showed ≈10% higher water sorption than the commercial resistant starches.  相似文献   

14.
The amylose concentration in starch from 16 quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa Willd.) genotypes grown under identical conditions was 4–20%. Based on the amylose content, a selection of six genotypes was made. Starch granule‐bound proteins were extracted from six genotypes and analyzed using denaturing gel electrophoresis. Two major polypeptides with apparent molecular masses of 56 and 62 kDa were present in all genotypes. Both were identified as granule‐bound starch synthase I (GBSSI) using immunoblot analysis and internal peptide sequencing. The content of the two GBSSI isoforms in starch granules from the six genotypes, as determined by densiometry of the peptide bands, was positively correlated with the concentration of amylose in starch from mature seed. Starch synthase activity in developing seed was positively correlated to starch concentration in seed and amylose concentration in starch during seed development.  相似文献   

15.
Native starch granules of 11 selected cultivars (potato, waxy potato, sweet potato, normal maize, high‐amylose maize, waxy maize, wheat, normal barley, high‐amylose barley, waxy barley, and rice) were treated with a calcium chloride solution (4M) for surface gelatinization. The surface‐gelatinized starch granules were investigated using light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). In general, those starches with larger granule sizes required longer treatment time to complete the gelatinization. The salt solution treatment of starch was monitored by light microscopy and stopped when the outer layer of the granule was gelatinized. The surface gelatinized starch granules were studied using scanning electron microscopy. On the basis of the gelatinization pattern from calcium chloride treatments, the starches could be divided into three groups: 1) starches with evenly gelatinized granule surface, such as normal potato, waxy potato, sweet potato, maize, and high‐amylose maize; 2) starches with salt gelatinization concentrated on specific sites of the granule (i.e., equatorial groove), such as wheat, barley, and high‐amylose barley; and 3) starches that, after surface gelatinization, can no longer be separated to individual granules for SEM studies, such as waxy barley, waxy maize, and normal rice. The morphology of the surface gelatinized starch resembled that of enzyme‐hydrolyzed starch granules.  相似文献   

16.
Eight soft spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) genotypes representing the four granule bound starch synthase I (GBSSI) classes were evaluated with respect to flour/starch characteristics and pasting behaviors. Native starch was isolated from genotype straight‐grade flours (94.8–98.1% of starch recovered) to approximate the starch populations of the parent flours. As anticipated, amylose characteristics varied among the genotypes according to GBSSI class and accounted for the primary compositional difference between genotypes. Total (TAM), apparent (AAM), and lipid‐complexed (LAM) amylose contents ranged from 1.0–25.5 g, 0.7–20.4 g, and 0.3–5.6 g/100 g of native starch, respectively, and gradually decreased with the progressive loss of active Wx alleles. In addition, genotype flour total starch (FTS) and A‐type starch granule contents, which ranged from 81.7–87.6 g/100 g of flour (db) and 61.6–76.8 g/100 g of native starch (db), respectively, generally decreased with an increase in waxy character in parallel with amylose characteristics, as likely secondary effects of Wx gene dosage. Though amylose characteristics predominantly accounted for the majority of genotype flour pasting properties, FTS content and ratios of A‐ to B‐type granules also exhibited significant influence. Thus, loss of one or more Wx genes appeared to induce measurable secondary effects on starch characteristics and properties.  相似文献   

17.
Starch granule composition and amylopectin structure affect starch digestibility, an important factor influencing wheat grain utilization for human food consumption. Six bread wheat cultivars with four belonging to the Canada Western Red Spring (CWRS) and two Canada Prairie Spring Red (CPSR) market classes were analyzed for the relationship between their grain constituents and in vitro enzymatic hydrolysis of starch. CPSR cultivars had higher starch and amylose concentrations compared with CWRS cultivars, which had a higher protein concentration. Starch granule size distribution did not differ among the genotypes, except AC Foremost, which had significantly (P < 0.05) higher volume percent of B‐type starch granules (≈15%) and lower volume percent of A‐type starch granules (≈9%) compared with other cultivars. Fluorophore‐assisted capillary electrophoresis revealed a lower content of R‐IV (DP 15–18, ≈6%) and a higher content of R‐VII (DP 37–45, ≈7%) chains in the CPSR cultivars compared with the CWRS cultivars. Starch in vitro enzymatic hydrolysis showed that compared with CWRS cultivars, the two CPSR cultivars had reduced amounts of readily digestible starch and higher amounts of slowly digestible starch and resistant starch. Consequently, the two CPSR cultivars also showed lower hydrolysis indexes in grain meal as well as extracted starch. CPSR cultivars, with higher starch and amylose concentrations, as well as a higher content of long chains of amylopectin, showed a reduced starch in vitro enzymatic hydrolysis rate.  相似文献   

18.
Phosphorylated starches were prepared with sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP) at pH 6, 8, and 10 from waxy (wx, 3.3% amylose), normal (22.4% amylose), and two high-amylose (ae, 47 and 66% amylose) maize starches. After phosphorylation, the gelatinization peak temperature (Tp) decreased and pasting peak viscosity (PV) increased for all the starches except wx, which showed a slight increase in gelatinization temperature. There was a substantial effect of phosphorylation pH on paste viscosity. More crosslinking was found in ae starches with phosphorylation at pH 10. Sodium ions apparently decreased PV of all the phosphorylated starches while only slightly affecting PV of native starches. Phosphorylation increased swelling power of some of the starches, with maximum swelling power at phosphorylation pH 8 and minimum at pH 10. Maximum swelling power for wx starch after preparation was at pH 8 and minimum at pH 6. After phosphorylation, the clarity and freeze-thaw stability of all the starches was greatly increased compared with the native starches. Phosphorylation increased digestibility of ae starches but had little effect on wx and normal starches. After phosphorylation, the adhesiveness, springiness, and cohesiveness of all starch gels generally increased, the hardness of 47% ae and wx starches increased, and that of normal starches decreased. Enthalpy of gelatinization decreased after phosphorylation with the greatest decrease observed for ae starches. When the phosphorylation pH increased from 6 to 10, the brightness (L*) of all the phosphorylated starches decreased, while a* and b* of all the phosphorylated starch increased. Scanning electron micrographs showed some erosion on the surface of starch granules after phosphorylation.  相似文献   

19.
A high‐amylose, non‐floury corn, a floury corn, and a 1:1 blend were made into masa and then tortillas. The masa flour made with the high‐amylose corn had a greater amount of resistant starch (RS 28.8%) and a greater amount of total dietary fiber (TDF 42.1%) than that with the floury corn (RS 2.9%, TDF 9.6%), producing a high‐fiber tortilla. The masa was evaluated for pasting properties using a Rapid ViscoAnalyser (RVA). The high‐amylose masa slurry gelatinized little at 95°C. The floury masa had the greatest peak viscosity, whereas the 1:1 blend was intermediate in value. Sensory evaluations of the tortillas for the textural attributes showed the floury tortillas to be chewier, more rollable, and grittier than the high‐amylose tortillas, whereas the blend tortillas were intermediate for most attributes. The cutting force of the high‐amylose tortillas, measured on a texture analyzer, was very low; the blend and floury tortillas required more force. Chewiness was correlated to rollability (r = 0.99, P = 0.05). The %RS and %TDF were correlated to rollability (r = –0.99), and cutting force (r = 0.99). The floury and blend tortillas had firm textures expected of desirable tortillas, whereas the high‐amylose tortillas broke under little force, and would not roll. The high‐amylose tortillas had high amounts of RS and TDF but poor texture. The blend tortillas retained most floury tortilla textural properties, making them suitable products for consumer use.  相似文献   

20.
Nine types of muffins made with three levels of β‐glucan and three amylose‐amylopectin ratios were prepared at the Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center, United States Department of Agriculture. They were fed to human subjects to study effects of starch composition and dietary fiber content on the carbohydrate and lipid metabolism in normal and overweight women. The main objective of this study was to determine resistant starch (RS) and total dietary fiber (TDF) content of the muffins 1) using AACC Approved Method 32‐07 and AOAC method 991.43, incorporating a pretreatment step with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) before enzyme incubation, 2) with pretreatment at 100 and 121°C before incubation with amyloglucosidase, and 3) using samples chewed by human subjects before incubation with pancreatin and amyloglucosidase. For method 1, on an as‐eaten basis, TDF content was 2.81 to 9.64 g/100 g for samples without DMSO pretreatment and 1.66 to 4.06 g/100 g with DMSO pretreatment. RS content was 0.30 to 11.18 g/100 g for methods 1 and 2, respectively. Methods 2 and 3 had the best correlation for all muffins tested (r2 = 0.97).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号