Background and objectives: Protein powders contain metastable radicals that are released upon hydration. The influence of protein source, free radical content, and hydration condition on luminescence was investigated. Findings: Hydration of rice, soy, pea, and egg albumin generated a burst of luminescence in the absence of added enhancers/stimulates. Rice proteins were generated from 3 to 10 times more luminescence than other protein samples. Hydrating proteins with 25 mM H 2 O 2 increased the luminescence intensities from all food proteins. Luminescence maximums occurred between 550-600 nm for rice protein, 500-600 nm for soy protein, and two peaks from egg albumin (500-550 nm and <450 nm). Carbon-centered metastable radicals were most abundant in rice protein which contained between 3.87 × 10 16 -53.44 × 10 16 spins per gram. Plotting intrinsic luminescence versus spins per gram (including all types of proteins examined) revealed an r-square of 0.771. Conclusions: Based on peak shape, g-value (2.0050 ± 0.0003) and power saturation (4-8 mW), metastable radicals in proteins were identified as carbon-centered. Both intrinsic and added sources of oxidative stimuli strongly correlate with the generation of chemically stimulated luminescence from hydrated proteins. Significance and novelty: These findings are the first to correlate the quantity of metastable radicals in rice proteins with intrinsic luminescence generated upon hydration and provide spectral characterization of luminescence from these proteins.
K E Y W O R D Scarbon-centered metastable radicals, chemically stimulated luminescence, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, rice protein concentrates