Scientists create thinnest ever pasta as part of medical research
by Graeme Whitfield · ChronicleLiveScientists say they have created the world’s thinnest spaghetti, with their creation being about 200 times thinner than a human hair.
The pasta is not intended to be a new food but was created because these extremely fine strands of material – called nanofibers – could have a number of important medical uses. Among the uses for the nanofibers are to make bandages to help wound healing as they allow water and moisture in but keep bacteria out; as scaffolding for bone regeneration; and for drug delivery.
The researchers at University College London say it is more environmentally friendly to create the strands directly from a starch-rich ingredient like flour. The nanofibers rely on starch being extracted from plant cells and purified, and the process needs a lot of energy and water.
Dr Adam Clancy, from UCL Chemistry, said: “To make spaghetti, you push a mixture of water and flour through metal holes. In our study, we did the same except we pulled our flour mixture through with an electrical charge. It’s literally spaghetti but much smaller.”
In the new study, published in Nanoscale Advances, the scientists describe making spaghetti just 372 nanometres (billionths of a metre) across using a technique called electrospinning, in which threads of flour and liquid are pulled through the tip of a needle by an electric charge.
In their paper, the researchers describe the next thinnest known pasta, called su filindeu (threads of God), made by hand by a pasta maker in the town of Nuoro, Sardinia. That pasta is estimated at about 400 microns wide – 1,000 times thicker than the new creation.
The researchers used flour and formic acid to make the pasta, rather than water, as the formic acid breaks up the giant stacks of spirals that make up starch – cooking has the same effect on the starch as the formic acid, breaking it up to make the pasta digestible. They also had to carefully warm up the mixture for several hours before slowly cooling it back down to make sure it was the right consistency.