Heat- and shear-reversible networks in food: A review

Compr Rev Food Sci Food Saf. 2022 Jul;21(4):3405-3435. doi: 10.1111/1541-4337.12988. Epub 2022 Jun 28.

Abstract

While nature behaves like an irreversible network with respect to entropy and time, certain systems in nature exist that are, to some extent, reversible. The property of reversibility imparts unique benefits to systems that possess them, making them suitable for designing self-healing, stimuli-responsive, and smart materials that can be used in widely divergent fields. Reversible networks are currently being exploited for applications in tissue engineering, drug delivery, and soft robotics. They are also being utilized as low-calorie fat mimetics with melt-in-your-mouth textures, as well as being explored as potential scaffolds for three-dimensional (3D) printable food, among other applications. This review aims to gather representative examples of heat- and shear-reversible networks in the food science literature from the last 30 or so years, in other words, reversible food gels made either from linear biopolymers or from colloidal, particulate dispersions, including those that have been modified specifically to induce reversibility. An overview of the network mechanisms involved that impart reversibility, including a discussion of the strength and range of forces involved, will be highlighted. A model that explains why certain networks are thermoreversible while others are shear-reversible, and why others are both, will also be proposed. A fundamental understanding of these mechanisms will prove invaluable when designing reversible networks in the future, making possible the precise control of their properties, thus fostering innovative applications within the food industry and beyond.

Keywords: fat mimetics or replacement; food gels; hydrocolloids; junction zone or depletion flocculation; reversible networks; thermoreversible or shear-reversible gels.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Gels
  • Hot Temperature*

Substances

  • Gels