THE USE OF CASSAVA PEELS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF AMYLASE USING BACILLUS SPP

Code: D23FE4338B0421  Price: 4,000   61 Pages     Chapter 1-5    6375 Views

THE USE OF CASSAVA PEELS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF AMYLASE USING BACILLUS SPP

CHAPTER ONE

1.0 INTRODUCTION

Cassava (Manihot esculenta) is the third largest source of food carbohydrates in the tropics, after rice and maize (Fauquet and Fargette, 1990). History revealed that cassava was introduced to Africa by Portuguese traders from Brazil in the 16th century. Maize and cassava are now important staple foods, replacing native African crops (FAO, 2001). Cassava is sometimes described as the bread of the tropics (Adams et al., 2009). But should not be confused with the tropical and equatorial bread free (Encephalartos), the breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis) or the African breadfruit (Treculia africana). Nigerian is the world’s largest producer of cassava. However, based on
the statistics from food agriculture organization (FAO), United Nation of Thailand is the largest exporting country of dried cassava, with a total of 77% of world export in 2015. The second largest exporting country is Vietnam, with 13.6%, followed by Indonesia (5.8% and Costa Rica (2.1%). Worldwide cassava production increased by 12.5% between 1998 and 1990. Cassava has been a raw material globally for industrial production of textiles, papers, adhesives, pharmaceutical and various food products because it is rich in carbohydrate with high energy density and has generated great impact in world economics (Aigbe and Remison, 2010).
Scientific Classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Class: Angiosperm
Unranked: Eudicots
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Euphorbiaceae
Subfamily: Crotonoideae
Genus: Manihot
Species: Manihot esculenta
In the vernacular languages of places where it is cultivated, Nigeria for example, cassava is called Akpu (Igbo), Paki/Ege (Yoruba) and Rogo (Hausa). Cassava root contains about 30% starch and significant amount of calcium (50 mg/100 g), phosphorus (40 mg/100 g) and vitamin C (25mg /100 g). Various food applications take advantages of cassava starch’s odourless, clear paste and high freeze – thaw stability properties. Starchy cassava roots can be processed into

THE USE OF CASSAVA PEELS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF AMYLASE USING BACILLUS SPP


Terms of Use: This is an academic paper. Students should NOT copy our materials word to word, as we DO NOT encourage Plagiarism. Only use as a guide in developing your original research work. Thanks.

Disclaimer: All undertaking works, records, and reports posted on this website, eprojectguide.com are the property/copyright of their individual proprietors. They are for research reference/direction purposes and the works are publicly supported. Do not present another person’s work as your own to maintain a strategic distance from counterfeiting its results. Use it as a guide and not duplicate the work in exactly the same words (verbatim). eprojectguide.com is a vault of exploration works simply like academia.edu, researchgate.net, scribd.com, docsity.com, course hero, and numerous different stages where clients transfer works. The paid membership on eprojectguide.com is a method by which the site is kept up to help Open Education. In the event that you see your work posted here, and you need it to be eliminated/credited, it would be ideal if you call us on +2348064699975 or send us a mail along with the web address linked to the work, to eprojectguide@gmail.com. We will answer to and honor each solicitation. Kindly note notification it might take up to 24 – 48 hours to handle your solicitation.

Material Information
  • ₦4,000.00 1 Price:
  • 61 2 No. of Pages:
  • 5 3 No. of Chapters:
  • No 4 Has Implementation:
FOR ENQUIRIES WE ARE AVAILABLE 24/7

Contact us on

DEPARTMENT
LAW