9005-25-8
Name | Starch |
CAS | 9005-25-8 |
EINECS(EC#) | 232-679-6 |
Molecular Formula | (C6 H10 O5)n |
MDL Number | MFCD00132834 |
Synonyms
hrw13
tapon
w-gum
Strke
Starch
trogum
genvis
meluna
keestar
maizena
maranta
melojel
cpc3005
cpc6448
clearjel
StarchBp
claro5591
okpre-gel
amaizow13
STARCH NF
farinex100
sta-rx1500
remylineac
sorghumgum
STARCHDUST
Pregelatine
staramic747
galactasola
alpha-starch
STARCHPOWDER
BIOSORBSTARCH
amylomaizevii
penfordgum380
riceicestarch
Purity gum BE
Corn starch NF
w-13stabilizer
Starch potatoe
StarchPotatoIp
StarchFromPotato
STARCH FROM RICE
STARCH INDICATOR
C PharmGel 03406
Rice Starch, waxy
Starch Total Dust
STARCH,RICE,POWDER
POTATO STARCH pure
STARCH,WHEAT,POWDER
Starh from potatoes
argobrandcornstarch
CORN(ZEAMAYS)STARCH
STARCH,POTATO,POWDER
Starch,Solani amylum
PharMaceutical starch
StarchPotatoFoodGrade
STARCH,CORN,POWDER,NF
CORNSTARCHGLOVEPOWDER
ElectrophoresisStarch
MaizeStarch,FoodGrade
corn starch OJI-AcE-A
STARCH WHEAT PURIFIED
MOULDING MAIZE STARCH
ZEA MAYS (CORN) STARCH
STARCH CORN/MAIZE pure
Starch respirable dust
Starch,extra pure,maize
Corn Starch, Powder, NF
STARCH WHEAT UNMODIFIED
STARCH,ARROWROOT,POWDER
STABLE STARCH INDICATOR
aquapel(polysaccharide)
THYODENE STABL INDICATOR
STARCH INDICATOR SOLUTION
stabilized w. 100ppb HgI2
Starch for pharmaceutical
ORYZA SATIVA (RICE) STARCH
Topical Starch, Powder, USP
Starch potato, solubleFood,
WHEAT(TRITICUMVULGARE)STARCH
StarchSmithies(Source:Potato)
CORN STARCH NF, PREGELATINIZED
stabilized w. 100ppb HgI2, pure
Starch, 1 wt.% aqueous solution
STARCH SOLUBLE, PURE, ERG. B. 6
TRITICUM VULGARE (WHEAT) STARCH
Starch,extra pure,potato, powder
Potato starch with monoglycerides
SOLANUM TUBEROSUM (POTATO) STARCH
STARCH FROM CORN, PRACTICAL GRADE
Starch,modified,insolubles0.01%max
Starch, potato, powder, extra pure
Corn starch, Starch from maize
STARCH FROM POTATOES, PH EUR, SOLUBL
STARCH POTATO HYDROLYZED FOR*ELECTRO
Starch, pure, 1 wt.% aqueous solution
STARCH FROM POTATOES, PH EUR, SOLUBLE
Starch, Hydrolyzed for Electrophoresis
CORN STARCH, STANDARD FOR STARCH*ASSAY K IT
WHEAT STARCH, STANDARD FOR STARCH *ASSAY KIT
STARCH SOLUBLE ACC. TO ZULKOWSKY FROM PO TATOES
STARCH SOLUBLE FROM POTATOES FOR ELECTRO PHORESIS
STARCH, 1 WT.% AQUEOUS SOLUTION, PURE, STABILIZED
STARCH, CORN, CONTROL FOR TOTAL DIETARY FIBER ASSAY
STARCH, WHEAT, CONTROL FOR TOTAL*DIETARY FIBER ASSA
STARCH SOLUBLE, PURISS. P.A.,REAG. ISO,REAG. PH. EUR.
Starch1 wt.% aqueous solution: stabilized w. 100ppb HgI2pure
Starch,for biochemistry,potato, hydrolyzed for electrophoresis
Starch,pure,1 wt.% aqueous solution: stabilized w. 100ppb HgI2
STARCH, POTATO, HYDROLYZED FOR ELECTROPHORESIS, FOR BIOCHEMISTRY
Chemical Properties
Appearance | white powder |
Melting point | 256-258°C |
density | 1.5 |
storage temp. | Store at 2-8°C |
solubility | H2O: 20 mg/mL, colorless, clear to slightly turbid |
form | Solution |
color | White |
PH | 4-7 (100g/l, H2O, 25℃)(slurry) |
Uses |
Starch is a carbohydrate consisting of glucose units containing amy-
lose and amylopectin which contribute to varying starch properties.
starch is insoluble in cold water, but upon heating the starch gran-
ules swell and burst forming starch paste. starch sources include
arrowroot, corn, potato, rice, sage, tapioca, waxy corn, and wheat.
starches are modified by treatment to alter their functional proper-
ties. terminology designating these starches includes acid-modified
cornstarch, food starch modified, modified food starch, oxidized
cornstarch, pregelatinized starch, thin-boiling starch, and wheat
starch, gelatinized. see specific starch.
|
EPA Substance Registry System | Starch(9005-25-8) |
Safety Data
Hazard Codes | Xi |
Risk Statements | |
Safety Statements | |
WGK Germany | 1 |
RTECS | GM5090000 |
F | 3 |
Autoignition Temperature | 400 °C |
TSCA | Yes |
HS Code | 11081100 |
Safety Profile |
A nuisance dust. Mildly toxic by intraperitoneal route. A skin irritant. An allergen. Flammable when exposed to flame; can react with oxidizing materials. Moderately explosive when exposed to flame.
|
Toxicity |
LD50 intraperitoneal in mouse: 6600mg/kg
|
Hazard Information
Chemical Properties
white fine crystalline powder
General Description
Fine, white, odorless powder. Note that granules from different vegetable sources vary in shape, size, and general appearance. A mixture of the carbohydrate polymers amylose amylopectin varying according to the vegetable source. Principally used for food.
Reactivity Profile
Starch is combustible. Presents a dust explosion hazard if dispersed as a fine dust in air in sufficient concentrations. Granules swell greatly in water and produce a colloidal suspension. Incompatible with oxidizing agents, acids, iodine, bases. Reacts with nitric acid/sulfuric acid mixtures to give nitroStarch, an explosive.
Definition
A polysaccharide that occurs exclusively
in plants. Starches are extracted
commercially from maize, wheat, barley,
rice, potatoes, and sorghum. The starches
are storage reservoirs for plants; they can
be broken down by enzymes to simple sugars
and then metabolized to supply energy
needs. Starch is a dietary component of animals.
Starch is not a single molecule but a mixture of amylose (water-soluble, blue color with iodine) and amylopectin (not water-soluble, violet color with iodine). The composition is amylose 10–20%, amylopectin 80–90%.
Starch is not a single molecule but a mixture of amylose (water-soluble, blue color with iodine) and amylopectin (not water-soluble, violet color with iodine). The composition is amylose 10–20%, amylopectin 80–90%.
Definition
starch: A polysaccharide consistingof various proportions of two glucosepolymers, amylose and amylopectin.It occurs widely in plants,especially in roots, tubers, seeds, andfruits, as a carbohydrate storageproduct and energy source. Starch istherefore a major energy source foranimals. When digested it ultimatelyyields glucose. Starch granules are insolublein cold water but disrupt ifheated to form a gelatinous solution.This gives an intense blue colourwith iodine solutions and starch isused as an indicator in certain titrations.
Production Methods
Starch is extracted from plant sources with specific processes
according to the botanical origin. Typical production steps are
steeping (corn), wet milling (corn, potato), dry milling (wheat), or
sieving and physical separation with hydrocyclones. The last
production step is usually a centrifugal separation from the starch
slurry followed by drying with hot air. The starch separation
process may use sulfur dioxide or peroxides as a processing aid,
improving the separation process and the microbial quality of the
final product.
Hazard
Dermatitis. Questionable carcinogen.
Agricultural Uses
Starch is reserve carbohydrate usually stored in the
seeds, roots or stems of a plant. It is the second largest
source of carbohydrates, next only to cellulose. Although
starch is widespread in plants, only a few sources are
abundant enough to make the extraction commercially
feasible. The general sources are arrowroot, barley,
corn, maize, potato, rice, sago, sorghum, tapioca and
wheat. Arrowroot, barley, potato and wheat are
commercial sources of starch, available as loosely
packed granules of varying shapes and sizes.
There are two basic types of starch molecules - the
linear starch polymer and the branched starch polymer.
Starch is a polysaccharide consisting of various
proportions of the two glucose polymers, namely,
amylose and amylopectin.
Amylose consists of an unbranched chain of 200 to 500 glucose units, whereas amylopectin consists of chains of 20 glucose units joined by cross links to give a highly branched structure. Most natural starches are mixtures of amylose and amylopectin; potato and cereal starches are 20 to 30% amylose and 70 to 80% amylopectin.
Amylum is the ordinary starch found in all green plants. A molecule of starch is built out of a large number of a-glucose rings joined through oxygen atoms, thus making starch a major energy source for animals. Starch is a tasteless, odorless, colorless, white amorphous powder insoluble in water. It turns iodine solutions intensely blue, and is used as an indicator in certain titrations. An expert can tell the source of a starch
by its appearance in a grain under the microscope. Starches in the form of rice, potato, wheat and some cereal products, supply about 70% of the world's food. Soluble starch is obtained by heating ordinary starch with 10% hydrochloric acid for 24 hours and then precipitating it with alcohol.
Natural starches are used as thickeners in food.
Amylose consists of an unbranched chain of 200 to 500 glucose units, whereas amylopectin consists of chains of 20 glucose units joined by cross links to give a highly branched structure. Most natural starches are mixtures of amylose and amylopectin; potato and cereal starches are 20 to 30% amylose and 70 to 80% amylopectin.
Amylum is the ordinary starch found in all green plants. A molecule of starch is built out of a large number of a-glucose rings joined through oxygen atoms, thus making starch a major energy source for animals. Starch is a tasteless, odorless, colorless, white amorphous powder insoluble in water. It turns iodine solutions intensely blue, and is used as an indicator in certain titrations. An expert can tell the source of a starch
by its appearance in a grain under the microscope. Starches in the form of rice, potato, wheat and some cereal products, supply about 70% of the world's food. Soluble starch is obtained by heating ordinary starch with 10% hydrochloric acid for 24 hours and then precipitating it with alcohol.
Natural starches are used as thickeners in food.
Pharmaceutical Applications
Starch is a versatile excipient used primarily in oral solid-dosage
formulations where it is utilized as a binder, diluent, and
disintegrant.
As a diluent, starch is used for the preparation of standardized triturates of colorants, potent drugs, and herbal extracts, facilitating subsequent mixing or blending processes in manufacturing operations. Starch is also used in dry-filled capsule formulations for volume adjustment of the fill matrix, and to improve powder flow, especially when using dried starches. Starch quantities of 3–10% w/w can act as an antiadherent and lubricant in tableting and capsule filling.
In tablet formulations, freshly prepared starch paste is used at a concentration of 3–20% w/w (usually 5–10%, depending on the starch type) as a binder for wet granulation. The required binder ratio should be determined by optimization studies, using parameters such as tablet friability and hardness, disintegration time, and drug dissolution rate.
Starch is one of the most commonly used tablet disintegrants at concentrations of 3–25% w/w; a typical concentration is 15%. When using starch, a prior granulation step is required in most cases to avoid problems with insufficient flow and segregation. A starch– lactose compound has been introduced enabling the use of granular starch in direct compression, improving the tableting process and the disintegration time of the tablets. However, starch that is not pregelatinized does not compress well and tends to increase tablet friability and capping if used in high concentrations. Balancing the elastic properties of starch with adapted excipients has been shown to improve the compaction properties in tableting.
Starch, particularly the fine powders of rice and wheat starch, is also used in topical preparations for its absorbency of liquids. Starch paste is used in ointment formulations, usually in the presence of higher ratios of glycerin.
Starch has been investigated as an excipient in novel drug delivery systems for nasal, and other site-specific delivery systems. The retrogradation of starch can be used to modify the surface properties of drug particles. Starches are useful carriers for amorphous drug preparations, such as pellets with immediate or delayed drug release obtained, for example, by melt extrusion, and they can improve the bioavailability of poorly soluble drugs.
Starch, particularly rice starch, has also been used in the treatment of children’s diarrheal diseases. Specific starch varieties with a high amylose content (resistant starches) are used as insoluble fiber in clinical nutrition, and also for colon-targeting applications. Due to their very high gelatinization temperature, these starches are used in extrusion/spheronization processes. Starches with a high amylopectin content (waxy starches) are used as the starting material for the synthesis of hydroxyethyl starch, a plasma volume expander.
Native starches conforming to pharmacopeial specifications are used as the raw materials for the production of starch-based excipients and active pharmaceutical ingredients, frequently covered with their own pharmacopeial monographs.
As a diluent, starch is used for the preparation of standardized triturates of colorants, potent drugs, and herbal extracts, facilitating subsequent mixing or blending processes in manufacturing operations. Starch is also used in dry-filled capsule formulations for volume adjustment of the fill matrix, and to improve powder flow, especially when using dried starches. Starch quantities of 3–10% w/w can act as an antiadherent and lubricant in tableting and capsule filling.
In tablet formulations, freshly prepared starch paste is used at a concentration of 3–20% w/w (usually 5–10%, depending on the starch type) as a binder for wet granulation. The required binder ratio should be determined by optimization studies, using parameters such as tablet friability and hardness, disintegration time, and drug dissolution rate.
Starch is one of the most commonly used tablet disintegrants at concentrations of 3–25% w/w; a typical concentration is 15%. When using starch, a prior granulation step is required in most cases to avoid problems with insufficient flow and segregation. A starch– lactose compound has been introduced enabling the use of granular starch in direct compression, improving the tableting process and the disintegration time of the tablets. However, starch that is not pregelatinized does not compress well and tends to increase tablet friability and capping if used in high concentrations. Balancing the elastic properties of starch with adapted excipients has been shown to improve the compaction properties in tableting.
Starch, particularly the fine powders of rice and wheat starch, is also used in topical preparations for its absorbency of liquids. Starch paste is used in ointment formulations, usually in the presence of higher ratios of glycerin.
Starch has been investigated as an excipient in novel drug delivery systems for nasal, and other site-specific delivery systems. The retrogradation of starch can be used to modify the surface properties of drug particles. Starches are useful carriers for amorphous drug preparations, such as pellets with immediate or delayed drug release obtained, for example, by melt extrusion, and they can improve the bioavailability of poorly soluble drugs.
Starch, particularly rice starch, has also been used in the treatment of children’s diarrheal diseases. Specific starch varieties with a high amylose content (resistant starches) are used as insoluble fiber in clinical nutrition, and also for colon-targeting applications. Due to their very high gelatinization temperature, these starches are used in extrusion/spheronization processes. Starches with a high amylopectin content (waxy starches) are used as the starting material for the synthesis of hydroxyethyl starch, a plasma volume expander.
Native starches conforming to pharmacopeial specifications are used as the raw materials for the production of starch-based excipients and active pharmaceutical ingredients, frequently covered with their own pharmacopeial monographs.
Biochem/physiol Actions
Starch is a carbohydrate made up of glucose units joined by glycosidic bonds. Undigested part of potato starch is referred as Resistant starch (RS). Resistant starch, RS4 reduces the concentrations of total cholesterol and triglycerides in the serum as well as enhances the concentration of HDL-cholesterol in Wistar rats.
Safety
Starch is an edible food substance, considered a food ingredient and
not a food additive. It is regarded as an essentially nontoxic and
nonirritant material. Starch is therefore widely used as an
excipient in pharmaceutical formulations.
Both amylose and amylopectin have been evaluated as safe and without limitation for daily intake. Allergic reactions to starch are extremely rare and individuals apparently allergic to one particular starch may not experience adverse effects with a starch from a different botanical source. The wheat proteins (gluten) are problematic for conditions such as celiac disease.
Contamination of surgical wounds with the starch glove powder used by surgeons has resulted in the development of granulomatous lesions.
LD50 (mouse, IP): 6.6 g/kg
Both amylose and amylopectin have been evaluated as safe and without limitation for daily intake. Allergic reactions to starch are extremely rare and individuals apparently allergic to one particular starch may not experience adverse effects with a starch from a different botanical source. The wheat proteins (gluten) are problematic for conditions such as celiac disease.
Contamination of surgical wounds with the starch glove powder used by surgeons has resulted in the development of granulomatous lesions.
LD50 (mouse, IP): 6.6 g/kg
storage
Dry starch is stable if protected from high humidity. Starch is
considered to be chemically and microbiologically inert under normal storage conditions. Starch solutions or pastes are physically
unstable and are readily metabolized by microorganisms; they
should therefore be freshly prepared when used for wet granulation.
Starch should be stored in an airtight container in a cool, dry place.
Starch should be stored in an airtight container in a cool, dry place.
Incompatibilities
Starch is incompatible with strongly oxidizing substances. Colored
inclusion compounds are formed with iodine.
Regulatory Status
GRAS listed. Included in the FDA Inactive Ingredients Database
(buccal tablets, oral capsules, powders, suspensions and tablets;
topical preparations; and vaginal tablets). Included in nonparenteral
medicines licensed in the UK. Included in the Canadian List of
Acceptable Non-medicinal Ingredients.
Supplier
Hubei Xinkai Bio-tech Co., Ltd
Telephone0716-8377578
Websitehttp://www.hbxksw.com
Hebei Zhentian Food Additives Co., Ltd.
Telephone0319-5925599 13373390591
Websitehttp://www.china2699.com/
J & K SCIENTIFIC LTD.
Telephone010-82848833 400-666-7788
Websitehttp://www.jkchemical.com
Meryer (Shanghai) Chemical Technology Co., Ltd.
Telephone021-61259108 18621169109
Websitehttps://www.meryer.com/cn/index/
Beijing HwrkChemical Technology Co., Ltd
Telephone010-89508211 18501085097
Websitehttp://www.hwrkchemical.com
Energy Chemical
Telephone021-021-58432009 400-005-6266
Websitehttp://www.energy-chemical.com
Shandong Xiya Chemical Co., Ltd
Telephone4009903999 13355009207
Websitehttp://www.xiyashiji.com
Tianjin heowns Biochemical Technology Co., Ltd.
Telephone400 638 7771
Websitehttp://www.heowns.com
Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co,Ltd.
Telephone86-21-63210123
Websitehttp://www.reagent.com.cn
Hunan Hui Bai Shi Biotechnology Co., Ltd.
Telephone0731-85526065 13308475853
Websitehttp://www.hnhbsj.com/
Spectrum Chemical Manufacturing Corp.
Telephone021-021-021-67601398-809-809-809 15221380277
Websitehttps://www.spectrumchemical.com/OA_HTML/index.jsp?minisite=10020&respid=22372&language=US
Wuhan Fortuna Chemical Co., Ltd
Telephone027-59207852 13308628970
Websitehttp://www.fortunachem.cn
ShangHai YuanYe Biotechnology Co., Ltd.
Telephone021-61312847 13636370518
Websitehttp://www.shyuanye.com
Chengdu Ai Keda Chemical Technology Co., Ltd.
Telephone4008-755-333 18080918076
Websitehttp://www.aikeshiji.com
Qingdao Free Trade Zone United International Co.,Ltd.
Telephone0532-83893697 18561902820
Websitehttp://www.unitedint.com
Thermo Fisher Scientific
Telephone800-810-5118
Websitehttp://www.thermo.com.cn
Beijing HuaMeiHuLiBiological Chemical
Telephone010-56205725
Websitehttp://www.huabeibiochem.com/
9ding chemical ( Shanghai) Limited
Telephone4009209199
Websitehttp://www.9dingchem.com
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