[Home]
[Full version]
Scientists work to stop chocolate going the way of George Clooney
Jun 10 ,General Science
What do George Clooney and old chocolate have in common? Both are still delicious but have greyed with age – and while this certainly hasn’t damaged the image of the former ER star, it does detract from the appeal of the beloved mocha ambrosia, despite being perfectly safe to eat.
To help maintain that seductive, shiny brown surface, scientists from Canada and Sweden have shown that understanding chocolate’s microstructure is key to stopping those unappetising looking, and sounding, “fat blooms” – the grey coating on old chocolate. They report their findings in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Soft Matter.
Fat blooms occur because chocolate is extremely sensitive to temperature – just a 2°C fluctuation will cause the cocoa butter to melt, then recrystallise, forming needle-like structures that scatter light, giving a dull appearance.
The team, led by Dérick Rousseau at Ryerson University, Canada, studied the surface of chocolate as it aged using a scanning electron microscope (SEM), which fires electrons at a surface and measures the electrons knocked back from it to build a picture of that surface with very high resolution.
They found that where the chocolate surface was rough, blooms were far more likely to form. Rousseau says that if manufacturers were to minimise the amount of surface imperfections, this would be a good way to reduce blooms.
Watch out if you like the strawberry cream, too – the team tested filled chocolates and found they were even more susceptible to the blooms. The liquid-state fat in the filling migrates through the chocolate, accelerating bloom formation and ultimately making the chocolate very soft.
Nigel Sanders, senior research scientist at Cadbury in Toronto, Canada, says that “as an industry, we haven’t got to the bottom of what tools we have to stop bloom formation from happening.”
“Companies as large as Cadbury do their own research – but never gets published,” adds Sanders. “It’s nice to see an academic study that helps the whole industry, and isn’t just for the big boys.”
Original article: Rousseau and Smith, Soft Matter, 2008, DOI: 10.1039/b718066g
Source: Royal Society of Chemistry
Related stories:
Fighting 'fat bloom' can mean a prettier look for Valentine’s Day chocolates
Chemists in England and the Netherlands have discovered a substance that could keep those boxes of Valentine’s Day chocolates, and other goodies, looking fresher and tastier. Their finding, which prevents formation of unsightly white films on the outside of chocolate, is scheduled for the March 12 issue of the ACS’
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
Researchers develop nano-sized 'cargo ships' to target and destroy tumors
Scientists have developed nanometer-sized 'cargo ships' that can sail throughout the body via the bloodstream without immediate detection from the body's immune radar system and ferry their cargo of anti-cancer drugs and markers into tumors that might otherwise go untreated or undetected.
Dark Halos Discovered on Mercury
The surprises continue. Scientists studying the harvest of photos from the MESSENGER spacecraft's Jan. 14th flyby of Mercury have found several craters with strange dark halos and one crater with a spectacularly shiny bottom.
Researchers catch rats' twitchy whiskers in action
Rats use their whiskers in a way that is closely related to the human sense of touch: Just as humans move their fingertips across a surface to perceive shapes and textures, rats twitch their whiskers to achieve the same goal. Now, in a finding that could help further understanding of perception across species, MIT neuroscientists have used high-speed video to reveal rat whiskers in action and show the tiny movements that underlie the rat's perception of its tactile environment.
Earth: A Borderline Planet for Life?
Our planet is changing before our eyes, and as a result, many species are living on the edge. Yet Earth has been on the edge of habitability from the beginning. New work by astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics shows that if Earth had been slightly smaller and less massive, it would not have plate tectonics - the forces that move continents and build mountains. And without plate tectonics, life might never have gained a foothold on our world.
'Electrospray' droplet research yields surprising, practical results
Chemical engineers at Purdue University are the first to mathematically describe precisely how droplets form when liquids are exposed to electric fields, an advance that could have applications in areas ranging from manufacturing to medical diagnostics.
Low-cost, Home-built 3-D Printer Could Launch a Revolution
The Altair 8800, introduced in the early 1970s, was the first computer you could build at home from a kit. It was crude, didn't do much, but many historians would say that it launched the desktop computer revolution. Hod Lipson, Cornell assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, thinks a little machine he calls a Fab@Home may have the same impact.
Nanocrystals Are Hot
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have discovered that nanocrystals of germanium embedded in silica glass don't melt until the temperature rises almost 200 degrees Kelvin above the melting temperature of germanium in bulk. What's even more surprising, these melted nanocrystals have to be cooled more than 200 K below the bulk melting point before they resolidify. Such a large and nearly symmetrical "hysteresis" — the divergence of melting and freezing temperatures above and below the bulk melting point — has never before been observed for embedded nanoparticles.
[Home]
[Full version]