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1.
The emulsification processes, during which acylglycerols/zinc stearate emulsifier, water, and oil phase formed ternary systems, such as water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions, oil-in-water (O/W) dispersions, and unstable oil-water mixtures, were investigated in order to characterize the progressive transformations of the dispersed systems. The type, structure, and phase transitions of the systems were found to be determined by temperature and water phase content. Crystallization of the emulsifier caused the destabilization and subsequent phase inversion of the emulsions studied, at a temperature of 60-61 degrees C. The observed destabilization was temporary and led, at lower temperature, to W/O emulsions, "O/W + O" systems, or O/W dispersions, depending on the water content. Simultaneous emulsification and cooling of 20-50 wt % water systems resulted in the formation of stable W/O emulsions that contained a number of large water droplets with dispersed oil globules inside them ("W/O + O/W/O"). In water-rich systems (60-80 wt % of water), crystallization of the emulsifier was found to influence the formation of crystalline vesicle structures that coexisted, in the external water phase, with globules of crystallized oil phase. Results of calorimetric, rheological, and light scattering experiments, for the O/W dispersions obtained, indicate the possible transition of a monostearoylglycerol-based alpha-crystalline gel phase to a coagel state, in these multicomponent systems.  相似文献   

2.
The ability of two saccharose esters, saccharose palmitate (SMP) and saccharose stearate (SMS), to form lamellar structure in oil/water/glyceryl stearate mixtures was investigated through ternary phase diagrams. Three different oils have been tested: fluid paraffin, C12‐15 alkylbenzoate, and cetearyl octanoate. On the basis of the phase behaviors several emulsions with liquid crystalline structure were obtained and then characterized. Furthermore the most stable ones were added with a moisturizing active, lauryl pyrrolidone (LP), or sodium‐D,Lpyroglutamate (PCA). After the addition, the stability of the emulsions was assessed: It was observed that PCA‐containing emulsions resulted as less stable compared to LP‐containing ones.  相似文献   

3.
Water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions of the water/C12E5/isooctanol/isooctane system have been prepared at 25° C. Phase behavior studies of the system with constant (2.5 and 6 wt.%) isooctanol concentration showed that the surfactant becomes more lipophilic with the increase in the alkanol concentration. Emulsification was carried out using four low-energy emulsification methods using the slow addition of one or various components to the rest of them, with gentle agitation. Emulsions with low-polydis-persity were obtained when the emulsification process started with a single lamellar liquid crystalline phase. If in addition to a lamellar liquid crystalline phase, other phases, such as excess water phase, were initially present, emulsions with intermediate polydispersity were produced. When a lamellar liquid crystalline phase was not involved and the spontaneous natural curvature of the surfactant was not changed during emulsification, highly polydisperse emulsions were obtained.  相似文献   

4.
Water transportation through the oil phase in W/O emulsions and in W1/O/W2 systems (W/O emulsion in contact with water) was examined. Substance diffusion through interfaces led to interface instability and spontaneous emulsification which caused nanodispersion formation. The photomicrographs of Pt/C replicas of emulsions showed the presence in the continuous oil phase a lot of nanodispersion droplets with a diameter in the range 17-25 nm. Diffusion coefficient (D) of water calculated on the base of Lifshiz-Slezov-Wagner (LSW) equation was about 15 times lower than the coefficients of molecular diffusion. Since such emulsions were extremely unstable toward coalescence, the growth of water droplets took place through as Ostwald ripening as coalescence. In three-phase W1/O/W2 systems diffusion of water, Rhodamine C, and ethanol was studied. D calculated on the base of the equation of nonstationary diffusion were approximately 1000 times lower than molecular ones. It was assumed, that nanodispersion droplets were more likely water carriers in investigated W/O emulsions stabilized by sorbitan monooleate.  相似文献   

5.
Multiple water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) emulsions offer a huge potential as encapsulation systems in different food, cosmetic, and pharmaceutical applications. Because of their complex structure, however, it is difficult to characterize these systems. Typical measurement techniques to determine the size and stability of the inner water droplets encapsulated in the oil droplets show limitations and inaccuracies. Determining the total amount of water in the inner droplets is most often done by indirect methods to date. We describe an analytical method based on differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) for characterizing the total amount of encapsulated water droplets and their stability in W/O/W multiple emulsions. It uses the possibility to directly determine the latent heat of freezing of water droplets of the same size and composition as in the multiple emulsions. The amount of water in the inner droplets of a W/O/W emulsion can thus be calculated very accurately. It is shown that this method enables furthermore detecting multi-modalities in the size distribution of inner water droplets in W/O/W emulsions. Changes in droplet size distribution of the inner droplets occurring during the second emulsification step of processing or during storage can be detected. DSC thus offers a powerful tool to characterize the structure of multiple W/O/W emulsions.  相似文献   

6.
Mixtures of polyols (glycerol, propylene glycol, glucose) and water were emulsified in oil (isopropyl myristate (IPM), medium chain triglycerides (MCT), long chain triglycerides (LCT), and d-limonene) under elevated pressures and homogenization, in the presence of polyglycerol polyricinoleate (PGPR), glycerol monooleate (GMO), and their mixture as emulsifiers to form water-in-oil emulsions. High pressures was applied to: a) the emulsion, b) the aqueous phase and c) the oil phase in the presence of the emulsifiers (PGPR and GMO). Under optimal pressure (2000 atms) applied to the ready-made emulsion or to the aqueous phase prior to its emulsification, and with optimal composition (30wt% polyol in the aqueous phase and MCT as the oil phase), the aqueous droplets were stable for months and submicron in size (0.1 μm). Moreover, due to equalization of the oil and the aqueous phases refractive indices, the emulsions were almost transparent. Pressure and polyols have synergistic effects on the emulsions stability. During preparation, surface tensions and interfacial tensions were dramatically reduced until an optimal water/polyols ratio was achieved, which allows rupturing of the droplets to submicronal size (0.1 μm) without recoalescence and fast diffusion to the interface. These unique W/O emulsions are suitable for preparing W/O/W double emulsions for sustained release of active materials for food applications.  相似文献   

7.
Three-phase geranyl acetate emulsions stabilized by a non-ionic surfactant, Laureth 4, were prepared with a constant weight fraction of a lamellar liquid crystal and varied aqueous to oil phase weight ratios according to the phase diagram. The appearance and micrographs of the drop pattern versus time were recorded. As expected, emulsions with the lower values of the water to oil (W/O) ratio appeared to be of the W/O variety while the two more stable emulsions with the highest W/O ratio appeared as oil to water (O/W). Considering the surfactant exclusive solubility in the oil, this result was unexpected and the emulsions were investigated as to their structure. Unpredictably, all the emulsions were of the O/W kind; including the highest ratio of oil to water. The reason for this unanticipated outcome was the lamellar liquid crystal being dispersed into the aqueous phase at the slightest perturbation.  相似文献   

8.
New equations for the viscosity of concentrated double emulsions of core-shell droplets are developed using a differential scheme. The equations developed in the paper predict the relative viscosity (eta(r)) of double emulsions to be a function of five variables: a/b (ratio of core drop radius to shell outer radius), lambda(21) (ratio of shell liquid viscosity to external continuous phase viscosity), lambda(32) (ratio of core liquid viscosity to shell liquid viscosity), phi(DE) (volume fraction of core-shell droplets in double emulsion), and phi(m)(DE) (the maximum packing volume fraction of un-deformed core-shell droplets in double emulsion). Two sets of experimental data are obtained on the rheology of O/W/O (oil-in-water-in-oil) double emulsions. The data are compared with the predictions of the proposed equations. The proposed equations describe the experimental viscosity data of double emulsions reasonably well.  相似文献   

9.
Microchannel (MC) emulsification is a novel technique for preparing monodispersed emulsions. This study demonstrates preparing water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) emulsions using MC emulsification. The W/O/W emulsions were prepared by a two-step emulsification process employing MC emulsification as the second step. We investigated the behavior of internal water droplets penetrating the MCs. Using decane, ethyl oleate, and medium-chain triglyceride (MCT) as oil phases, we observed successful MC emulsification and prepared monodispersed oil droplets that contained small water droplets. MC emulsification was possible using triolein as the oil phase, but polydispersed oil droplets were formed from some of the channels. No leakage of the internal water phase was observed during the MC emulsification process. The internal water droplets penetrated the MC without disruption, even though the internal water droplets were larger than the resulting W/O/W emulsion droplets. The W/O/W emulsion entrapment yield was measured fluorometrically and found to be 91%. The mild action of droplet formation based on spontaneous transformation led to a high entrapment yield during MC emulsification.  相似文献   

10.
Three-phase geranyl acetate emulsions stabilized by a non-ionic surfactant, Laureth 4, were prepared with a constant weight fraction of a lamellar liquid crystal and varied aqueous to oil phase weight ratios according to the phase diagram. The appearance and micrographs of the drop pattern versus time were recorded. As expected, emulsions with the lower values of the water to oil (W/O) ratio appeared to be of the W/O variety while the two more stable emulsions with the highest W/O ratio appeared as oil to water (O/W). Considering the surfactant exclusive solubility in the oil, this result was unexpected and the emulsions were investigated as to their structure. Unpredictably, all the emulsions were of the O/W kind; including the highest ratio of oil to water. The reason for this unanticipated outcome was the lamellar liquid crystal being dispersed into the aqueous phase at the slightest perturbation.  相似文献   

11.
Multiple emulsions consisting of water droplets dispersed in an oil phase containing emulsifier which is emulsified in an outer water phase (W/O/W) are of great interest in pharmacology for developing new drugs, in the nutrition sciences for designing functional food, and in biology as model systems for cell organelles such as liposomes. In the food industry multiple emulsions with high sugar content in the aqueous phase can be used for the production of sweets, because the high sugar content prevents deterioration. However, for these emulsions the refractive indexes of oil and aqueous phase are very similar. This seriously impedes the analysis of these emulsions, e.g., for process monitoring, because microscopic techniques based on transmission or reflection do not provide sufficient contrast. We have characterized the inner dispersed phase of concentrated W/O/W emulsions with the same refractive index of the three phases by micro Raman spectroscopy and investigated the composition and molecular distribution in water-oil-water emulsions by means of three-dimensional laser scanning CARS (coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering) microscopy. CARS microscopy has been used to study water droplets dispersed in oil droplets at different Raman resonances to visualize different molecular species. Water droplets with a diameter of about 700 nm could clearly be visualized. The advantages of CARS microscopy for studying this particular system are emphasized by comparing this microscopic technique with conventional confocal reflection and transmission microscopies.  相似文献   

12.
Transition from oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions to water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions and its action on enhanced oil recovery was investigated by viscosity, morphology, and simulated flooding experiments. This transition can be realized by increasing the volume ratio of oil to water or decreasing the emulsifier concentration. At a mass concentration of 0.3 wt%, the self-developed emulsifier FJ-1 mainly forms O/W emulsions at a volume ratio (oil to water) of 1:1. The emulsions behave as O/W emulsions with a low viscosity when the volume ratio of oil to water is below 2:1. Above 2:1, increasing volume ratio leads to the O/W emulsions transferring into W/O emulsions with high viscosity. For example, at a volume fraction of 4:1, the viscosity of W/O emulsions reaches 229.1 mPa · s, and separated water can hardly be detected. Transition from O/W emulsions to W/O emulsions with high viscosity can also be realized by decreasing the concentration of emulsifier to 0.05 wt% or lower at a volume ratio of 1:1. These may be the critical factors leading to transition from O/W emulsions to W/O emulsions at core conditions. Simulated flooding experiments show that emulsifier fluids can act as an in situ mobility improver and make an improvement of oil recovery even by 20.4%. The results indicate that the water-in-crude-oil emulsions possess great potential in enhancing oil recovery.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract

In this study, we are introducing a method that can effectively stabilize antioxidants in water‐in‐oil‐in‐water (W/O/W) double emulsions. Preliminarily, stable W/O/W double emulsions were produced by manipulating the characteristics of internal aqueous phase via two‐stage emulsification, resulting consequently in the formation of fine internal water droplets in the dispersed oil droplets. From conductivity measurements that can determine the elution amount of internal aqueous phase, it was confirmed that the double emulsion stability could be improved by treating the internal aqueous phase with a hydroxypropyl‐beta‐cyclodextrin. In this study, kojic acid, 5‐hydroxy‐2‐(hydroxymethyl)‐4‐pyrone was selected as a model antioxidant. The stabilization of kojic acid was attempted by locating it in the internal water droplets of the stable W/O/W double emulsions. The stability of kojic acid in the double emulsion system could be maintained at 90% for 10 weeks at high temperature. We believe that these stable W/O/W double emulsions could be used meaningfully as a carrier for many unstable antioxidants.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the viability and permeability of carbamazepine (CBZ) solubilized in fully dilutable non-ionic microemulsions across Caco-2 cells used as a model for intestinal epithelium. Maximum solubilization capacity (SC) of CBZ was determined within water-in-oil (W/O), bicontinuous and oil-in-water (O/W) structures formed upon dilution. The effect of the nature of the oil phase, surfactant type, and the ratio between the oil phase and surfactant on the quantity of solubilized CBZ, droplets size, the viability of the cells and drug permeability was elucidated. We found that: (1) several fully dilutable microemulsions based on pharma-grade ingredients can be loaded with very significant amounts of CBZ, (2) W/O microemulsions (10wt% water) exhibit up to 3-fold higher solubilization capacity over the drug's solubility in oil (triacetin), (3) CBZ in the O/W microemulsions (80wt% water) exhibit up to 29-fold higher solubilization than in water, (4) the O/W droplets of the examined systems are 9-11nm in size, (5) the highest permeability was obtained in systems containing triacetin/alpha-tocopherol acetate/ethanol in 3/1/4wt% ratio as oil phase and Tween 60 as surfactant, (6) the replacement of alpha-tocopherol acetate by alpha-tocopherol inhibits CBZ release, (7) replacement of a saturated chain of Tween 60 by an unsaturated (Tween 80) or shorter chain (Tween 40) inhibited drug release, (8) the decrease in the oil phase to surfactant ratio leads to enhancement of drug release (dilution line 64>dilution line 73).  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the effect of the droplet/pore size ratio on membrane demulsification, water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions with uniform-sized droplets was demulsified by permeation through Shirasu-porous-glass (SPG) membranes with a narrow pore size distribution at mean droplet/pore diameter ratios of 0.52–5.75. At transmembrane pressures above a critical pressure, the water droplets larger than the membrane pore size were demulsified, where the SPG membrane acted as a coalescer because the hydrophilic membrane surface had a high affinity for the water droplets. By contrast, at transmembrane pressures below the critical pressure, the larger water droplets were all retained by the membrane due to the sieving effect of the uniform-sized pores. When a W/O emulsion with a mean droplet diameter of 2.30 μm was allowed to permeate through a membrane with a mean pore diameter of 0.86 μm, the demulsification efficiency increased with increasing transmembrane pressure, to a maximum value of 91% at a transmembrane pressure of 392 kPa, and then decreased, while the transmembrane flux increased almost linearly with increasing transmembrane pressure. The demulsification efficiency was higher for higher water phase content and lower concentration of the surfactant, tetraglycerin condensed ricinoleic acid ester, in the emulsions due to the reduction of the emulsion stability.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of polyglycerol polyricinoleate (PGPR) and biopolymers (gelatin and sodium alginate) on the stabilization of water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions was investigated to improve the encapsulation efficiency (EE) of water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) emulsions containing mango seed kernel extract (MSKE). The physical properties and EE of the emulsions were found to depend more strongly on PGPR than on biopolymers. High EE values of MSKE were obtained when W/O emulsions stabilized by 4–8 wt% PGPR were incorporated with 1–5 wt% gelatin, or by 6–8 wt% PGPR incorporated with 0.5–1.5 wt% sodium alginate in the inner aqueous phase.  相似文献   

17.
《Comptes Rendus Chimie》2014,17(4):310-315
Submicron non-aqueous emulsions, of interest for biomedical and cosmetic formulations, were developed for the system comprising poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) 400 and Miglyol 812, an enzymatic degradable liquid glycerine ester. These emulsions, with PEG 400 as continuous phase and Miglyol 812 droplets, in the size range of 200 nm, were stabilized by a poly(butadiene)-b-poly(2-vinylpyridine) (PBut-b-P2VP) block copolymer with a composition close to 50/50 wt%. The droplet size, stability and the rheological characteristics were examined as a function of the copolymer concentration. An original aspect of these anhydrous emulsions, with a water miscible continuous phase, is their water dispersibility without additional surfactant. In fact, the initial anhydrous emulsion is sterically stabilized and after water addition at low pH, the protonated P2VP sequence of the copolymer provides the electro-steric stabilization. This oil-in-water emulsion is characterized by sub micron sized Miglyol 812 droplets in an aqueous phase of PEG 400 and water at pH 1.  相似文献   

18.
Water transfers are observed within complex systems containing aqueous phases separated by a membrane or an oil phase, such as biological cells or multiple emulsions. In order to better understand water transfer mechanism, a system made of a mixed water-in-oil (W/O) emulsion containing two kinds of aqueous droplets — pure water and a 30 % urea solution — was developed. Water transfer from pure water droplets to urea solution droplets was evidenced by Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC). Finally the mixed emulsion contains one kind of droplets made of a diluted urea solution which composition is in agreement with formulation and data obtained from experiments performed on single W/O emusions which dispersed phase is a diluted urea solution of the same composition. These mixed emulsions have been pictured as a three-fluid phases system containing two aqueous phases separated by a plane oil membrane. From a homogeneous solubility-diffusion model applied to a quasi-stationnary regime, the water intra-diffusion coefficient has been obtained and compared to the value calculated from the Stokes-Einstein equation. A factor ten makes the discrepancy between the two values, the value deduced from the model being the highest. A possible influence of the emulsifier molecules has been evoked.  相似文献   

19.
Concentrated CO(2)-in-water (C/W) emulsions are reported for amphiphiles containing alkylene oxide-, siloxane-, and fluorocarbon-based tails as a function of temperature and salinity. Poly(ethylene oxide)-b-poly(butylene oxide) (EO(15)-b-BO(12)) can emulsify up to 70% CO(2) with droplet sizes from 2 to 4 &mgr;m in diameter, as determined by video-enhanced microscopy. This emulsion is stable over 48 h against both flocculation and coalescence. In contrast, it is extremely difficult to form concentrated water-in-CO(2) (W/C) emulsions with surfactants containing alkylene oxide moieties due to limited solvation of such tails by CO(2). In several cases, C/W emulsions are formed even when the surfactant prefers CO(2). This violation of Bancroft's rule may be attributed in part to the low viscosity of the compressed CO(2), which governs several mass and momentum transport mechanisms relevant to emulsion formation and stabilization. For the first time, W/C microemulsions are observed in a system with a nonionic amphiphile, namely F(CF(2)CF(2))(3-8)CH(2)CH(2)O(CH(2)CH(2)O)(10-15)H. For the same system, the emulsion morphology changes from C/W to W/C as the temperature increases. The electrical conductivity of C/W emulsions is predicted successfully as a function of the dispersed phase volume fraction of CO(2) with Maxwell's theory for inhomogeneous systems. Copyright 2001 Academic Press.  相似文献   

20.
Triton X-100/C10H21OH/H2O体系微乳液与溶致液晶   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
关于离子型表面活性剂生成的微乳液与溶致液晶已有不少研究,非离子型表面活性剂生成的微乳液与港致液晶的应用正在引起人们的重视,但由于药物提纯的困难,对其物理化学性质的研究还不多见.本文以非离子表面活性剂TritonX-100/C10H21OH/H2O体系为例,研究了非离子型表面活性剂微乳液和溶致液晶的生成及其结构特性.1实验部分试剂ThitonX-100(Aldrich公司,分析纯)正癸醇(分析纯)、水为一次蒸馏水微乳液区域和层状液晶区域的确定方法及小角x射线衍射测定方法同文献,实验温度20±0.1℃.2结果与讨论2·IThtonX-100、CIOH…  相似文献   

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