When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: concentrate vs isolate hydrolysate water

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of purification methods in chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_purification...

    Water purification combines a number of methods to produce potable or drinking water. Downstream processing refers to purification of chemicals, pharmaceuticals and food ingredients produced by fermentation or synthesized by plant and animal tissues, for example antibiotics, citric acid, vitamin E, and insulin.

  3. Hydrolyzed protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrolyzed_protein

    Hydrolyzed protein is a solution derived from the hydrolysis of a protein into its component amino acids and peptides. While many means of achieving this process exist, the most common method is prolonged heating with hydrochloric acid , [ 1 ] sometimes with an enzyme such as pancreatic protease to simulate the naturally occurring hydrolytic ...

  4. Milk protein concentrate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_protein_concentrate

    Milk protein concentrate (MPC) is any type of concentrated milk product that contains 40–90% milk protein. The United States officially defines MPC as "any complete milk protein ( casein plus lactalbumin ) concentrate that is 40 percent or more protein by weight."

  5. Soy protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soy_protein

    The soy cotyledon storage proteins, important for human nutrition, can be extracted most efficiently by water, water plus dilute alkali (pH 7–9), or aqueous solutions of sodium chloride (0.5–2 M ≈ 30-120 g/L) from dehulled and defatted soybeans that have undergone only a minimal heat treatment so the protein is close to being native or ...

  6. Dilution ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dilution_ratio

    In photographic development, dilutions are normally given in a '1+x' format. For example '1+49' would typically mean 1 part concentrate and 49 parts water, meaning a 500ml solution would require 10ml concentrate and 490ml water.

  7. Hydrolysate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrolysate

    Hydrolysate refers to any product of hydrolysis. Protein hydrolysate has special application in sports medicine because its consumption allows amino acids to be absorbed by the body more rapidly than intact proteins, thus maximizing nutrient delivery to muscle tissues. [1] It is also used in the biotechnology industry as a supplement to cell ...

  8. Concentrate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concentrate

    A concentrate is a form of substance that has had the majority of its diluting agent or diluent (in the case of a liquid: the solvent) removed, such that the substance becomes the majority of the composition. Typically, this will be the removal of water from a solution or suspension, such as the removal of water from fruit juice.

  9. Bodybuilding supplement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodybuilding_supplement

    There are three types of whey protein: whey concentrate, whey isolate, and whey hydrolysate. Whey concentrate is 29–89% protein by weight whereas whey isolate is 90%+ protein by weight. Whey hydrolysate is enzymatically predigested and therefore has the highest rate of digestion of all protein types. [15]