Collaborative Analysis of Wheat Endosperm Compressive Material Properties |
| |
Authors: | Craig F. Morris,Stephen R. Delwiche,Arthur D. Bettge,Fré dé ric Mabille,Joë l Abé cassis,Marvin J. Pitts,Floyd E. Dowell,Camille Deroo,Tom Pearson |
| |
Abstract: | The objective measurement of cereal endosperm texture, for wheat (Triticum spp. L.) in particular, is relevant to the milling, processing, and utilization of grain. The objective of this study was to evaluate the interlaboratory results of compression failure testing of wheat endosperm specimens of defined geometry. Parallelepipeds (bricks) and cylinders were prepared from individual soft and hard near‐isogenic wheat kernels and compressed in two orientations (parallel and perpendicular to the long brush‐to‐germ axis). Compression curves were used to derive failure stress, failure strain, work density (area under the curve), and Young's modulus. In all five laboratories, the ability to delineate hard from soft wheat endosperm material properties was quite high. Four laboratories compressed endosperm bricks in the same orientation, on edge; texture class (soft vs. hard) was consistently the greatest source of variation in analysis of variance models (F‐values from 417 to 1401, Young's modulus and failure stress, respectively). Failure stress was found to be the best overall means of measuring the difference in what is known in the vernacular as wheat hardness. Across laboratories, the absolute measures of all four material properties ranged on the order of about two‐ to threefold from low to high, although within a laboratory, results were highly consistent. Laboratory by texture class interaction was deemed to be of minor importance. Brick size and moisture content within the ranges tested were not major sources of variation, and cylinders prepared from endosperm produced results similar to those obtained from bricks. The results suggested that wheat endosperm might express some level of anisotropic behavior, as specimens compressed in the kernel orientation parallel to the long axis failed at lower strain and stress values, with lower work density, when compared with kernel orientation perpendicular to the long axis. A key feature of interlaboratory variation was identified as being instrument rigidity, a subject of ongoing research. In conclusion, the preparation of endosperm specimens of defined size and shape, in combination with compression failure testing at low moisture content (<18%), is useful for objectively delineating the phenomenon known as hardness. The study presented here will advance our ability to objectively measure cereal grain texture and the material properties of endosperm. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|