Chemical composition polysaccharide whose backbone structure consists of a linear chain of
mannose with short lateral-branches of
galactose. Chemically, guar gum is an exo-
polysaccharide composed of the
sugars
galactose and
mannose. The backbone is a linear chain of β 1,4-linked mannose residues to which galactose residues are 1,6-linked at every second mannose, forming short side-branches. Guar gum has the ability to withstand temperatures of 80 °C (176 °F) for five minutes.
Solubility and viscosity Guar gum is more soluble than
locust bean gum due to its extra
galactose branch points. Unlike locust bean gum, it is not self-gelling. Either
borax or
calcium can
cross-link guar gum, causing it to
gel. In water, it is
nonionic and
hydrocolloidal. It is not affected by ionic strength or
pH, but will degrade at extreme pH and temperature (e.g., pH 3 at 50 °C). Guar gum shows a clear low shear plateau on the flow curve and is strongly shear-thinning. The rheology of guar gum is typical for a random coil polymer. It does not show the very high low shear plateau viscosities seen with more rigid polymer chains such as xanthan gum. It is very
thixotropic above 1% concentration, but below 0.3%, the thixotropy is slight. Guar gum shows viscosity synergy with
xanthan gum. Guar gum and
micellar casein mixtures can be slightly thixotropic if a biphase system forms.
Thickening One use of guar gum is as a thickening agent in foods and medicines for humans and animals. Because it is gluten-free, it is used as an additive to replace wheat flour in baked goods.:41 It has been shown to reduce serum cholesterol and lower blood glucose levels. Guar gum is also economical because it has almost eight times the water-thickening ability of other agents (e.g.,
cornstarch) and only a small quantity is needed for producing sufficient
viscosity. Because less is required, costs are reduced. In addition to guar gum's effects on viscosity, its high ability to flow, or
deform, gives it favorable
rheological properties. It forms forms gels that can be broken down after use when cross-linked with boron. It is used in various multi-phase formulations for hydraulic fracturing, in some as an
emulsifier because it helps prevent oil droplets from coalescing, and in others as a
stabilizer to help prevent solid particles from settling and/or separating. Fracking entails the pumping of sand-laden fluids into an oil or natural gas reservoir at high pressure and flow rate. This cracks the reservoir rock and then props the cracks open. Water alone is too thin to be effective at carrying
proppant sand, so guar gum is one of the ingredients added to thicken the slurry mixture and improve its ability to carry proppant. There are several properties which are important 1.
Thixotropic: the fluid should be thixotropic, meaning it should gel within a few hours. 2. Gelling and de-gelling: The desired viscosity changes over the course of a few hours. When the fracking slurry is mixed, it needs to be thin enough to make it easier to pump. Then as it flows down the pipe, the fluid needs to gel to support the proppant and flush it deep into the fractures. After that process, the gel has to break down so that it is possible to recover the fracking fluid but leave the proppant behind. This requires a chemical process which produces then breaks the gel cross-linking at a predictable rate. Guar+boron+proprietary chemicals can accomplish both of these goals at once.
Ice crystal growth Guar gum retards ice crystal growth by slowing mass transfer across the solid/liquid interface. It shows good stability during freeze-thaw cycles. Thus, it is used in egg-free ice cream. Guar gum has synergistic effects with locust bean gum and
sodium alginate. May be synergistic with
xanthan: together with xanthan gum, it produces a thicker product (0.5% guar gum / 0.35% xanthan gum), which is used in applications such as soups, which do not require clear results. Guar gum is a hydrocolloid, hence is useful for making thick pastes without forming a gel, and for keeping water bound in a sauce or emulsion. Guar gum can be used for thickening cold and hot liquids, to make hot gels, light foams and as an emulsion stabilizer. Guar gum can be used for cottage cheeses, curds, yoghurt, sauces, soups and frozen desserts. Guar gum is also a good source of fiber, with 80% soluble dietary fiber on a dry weight basis.
Grading Guar gum is analysed for Guar gum powder standards are: •
HS-Code- 130 232 30 •
CAS No.- 9000-30-0 •
EEC No.- E 412 •
BT No.- 1302 3290 •
EINECS No. - 232-536-8 •
Imco Code- Harmless ==Manufacturing process==