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How to detect the glucomannan content and viscosity of konjac gum? How to quantitatively evaluate the viscosity and transparency of its hydrated solution?

How to detect the glucomannan content and viscosity of konjac gum? How to quantitatively evaluate the viscosity and transparency of its hydrated solution?

Glucomannan content and viscosity are the two core indicators for evaluating konjac gum quality. High-purity food-grade konjac gum typically has a glucomannan content of ≥70% and a viscosity of ≥20,000 mPa·s for a 1% solution. Transparency is quantitatively evaluated using transmittance (T%) measured with a spectrophotometer.


I. Glucomannan Content Detection

Glucomannan is the active functional component of konjac gum. The industry primarily uses the following two methods for detection:

Method

Principle

Scope & Features

Ethanol Precipitation - Gravimetric Method

Utilizes the property of glucomannan being insoluble in ethanol. The sample is dissolved, precipitated with 80% ethanol, dried, and weighed.

Most common (GB/T 18104-2000). Suitable for routine QC of raw konjac powder. Results expressed as mass percentage.

Acid Hydrolysis - Spectrophotometry / Chromatography

Acid hydrolyzes glucomannan into mannose/glucose, quantified by DNS reagent (colorimetry) or HPLC/GC.

More accurate. Reflects true molecular content. Used for complex products (e.g., gels, compound foods).

Standard Reference: Food-grade konjac refined powder typically requires glucomannan content ≥70%, with high-purity grades reaching ≥85%.


II. Viscosity Testing Protocol

Konjac gum is a high-viscosity pseudoplastic fluid. Strict SOPs are essential for reproducible testing.

1. Sample Preparation (Critical Step)

  • Concentration: Standard test concentration is 1% (1g konjac gum per 99g water).

  • Dispersion: Slowly sprinkle powder into deionized water under high-speed stirring to prevent "fish eyes" (lumping).

  • Hydration: Stir 30-60 minutes until fully hydrated. For refined konjac, heating to 80-85°C accelerates dissolution and deaeration.

2. Instrument & Parameters

  • Instrument: Brookfield rotational viscometer (RV or LV series).

  • Conditions:

    • Rotor: Select LV-3, LV-4, or RV-2 based on viscosity range (ensure torque 10%-90%).

    • Temperature: 30°C (water bath, ±0.1°C).

    • Speed: 12 rpm or 20 rpm (record both speed and rotor).

  • Reading: Wait for stabilization, record apparent viscosity (mPa·s).

Acceptance Criteria: Standard-grade 1% konjac gum solution viscosity: ≥20,000 mPa·s; premium grades: >30,000 mPa·s.


III. Hydration Quality: Viscosity & Transparency Evaluation

1. Viscosity Performance Metrics

  • Static Viscosity: Apparent viscosity at fixed shear rate.

  • Thixotropy: Evaluate viscosity recovery after high shear (simulates processing).

  • Viscosity Stability: Monitor viscosity change after standing 24h/48h.

2. Transparency Quantification (Clarity)

Transparency indicates purity and refinement level.

  • Method: Visible Spectrophotometry.

  • Procedure:

    1. Prepare 1% solution (heated to 85°C for complete dissolution).

    2. Cool to 25°C.

    3. Use 1cm quartz/glass cuvette.

    4. Measure transmittance (T%) at 450 nm or 620 nm vs. deionized water blank (100%).

  • Evaluation Standard:

    • High Transparency: T% ≥ 80% (high purity, low insoluble residue).

    • Low Transparency: T% < 60% (crude product, high impurities, or incomplete dissolution).


IV. Key Quality Control Workflow

Step

Parameter

Control Point

Raw Material

Glucomannan ≥70%, Moisture ≤12%

Reject low purity/high moisture material.

Dissolution

1% solution, 85°C heating, deaeration

Ensure no undissolved particles.

Viscosity QC

30°C, LV-3 rotor, 20 rpm

Standardize for batch comparison.

Transparency QC

T% @ 450nm ≥ 80%

Critical for clarity-demanding applications.

Note: Viscosity and transparency are highly dependent on dissolution quality. Poor dispersion leads to low readings, indicating preparation failure, not necessarily material defect.


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