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1.
Rheological investigations have identified a shear viscosity transition from shear thinning to Newtonian at low to moderate shear rates for concentrated polydimethylsiloxane emulsions during successive shearing cycles. The viscosity "flattening" behavior is dependent on the maximum shear rate applied and on droplet deformation. Atomic force microscopy measurements indicate attraction between the "repulsive" emulsion droplets under deformation. The results suggest formation of stable droplet layers due to deformation under high shear hydrodynamic compression. Based on these findings, unique methods to control the post-shear rheology of concentrated emulsions can be envisaged.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of oil type (n-hexadecane, 1-decanol, n-decane), droplet composition (hexadecane:decanol), and emulsifier type (Tween 20, gum arabic) on droplet growth in oil-in-water emulsions was studied. Droplet size distributions of emulsions were measured over time (0-120 h) by laser diffraction and ultrasonic spectroscopy. Emulsions containing oil molecules of low polarity and low water solubility (hexadecane) were stable to droplet growth, irrespective of the emulsifier used to stabilize the droplets. Emulsions containing oil molecules of low polarity and relatively high water solubility (decane) were stable to coalescence, but unstable to Ostwald ripening, irrespective of emulsifier. Droplet growth in emulsions containing oil molecules of relatively high polarity and high water solubility (decanol) depended on emulsifier type. Decanol droplets stabilized by Tween 20 were stable to droplet growth in concentrated emulsions but unstable when the emulsions were diluted. Decanol droplets stabilized by gum arabic exhibited rapid and extensive droplet growth, probably due to a combination of Ostwald ripening and coalescence. We proposed that coalescence was caused by the relatively low interfacial tension at the decanol-water boundary, which meant that the gum arabic did not absorb strongly to the droplet surfaces and therefore did not prevent the droplets from coming into close proximity.  相似文献   

3.
Confined flow of polymer blends   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The influence of confinement on the steady-state morphology of two different emulsions is investigated. The blends, made from polybutene (PB) in polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and polybutadiene (PBD) in PDMS, are sheared between two parallel plates, mostly with a standard gap spacing of 40 microm, in the range of shear rates at which the transition from "bulk" behavior toward "confined" behavior is observed. For both cases, the influence of the concentration was systematically investigated, as well as the shear rate effects on the final steady-state morphology. By decreasing the shear rate, for each blend, the increasing droplets, i.e., increasing confinement for a fixed gap spacing, arrange themselves first into two layers, and when the degree of confinement reaches an even higher value, a single layer of droplets is formed. The ratio between the drop diameters and the gap spacing at which this transition occurs is always lower than 0.5. While decreasing the shear rate, the degree of confinement increases due to drop coalescence. Droplets arrange themselves in superstructures like ordered pearl necklaces and, at the lower shear rates, strings. The aspect ratio and the width of the droplet obtained from optical micrographs are compared to predictions of the single droplet Maffettone-Minale model (MM model(1)). It is found that the theory, meant for unconfined shear flow, is not able to predict the drop deformation when the degree of confinement is above a critical value that depends on the blends considered and the shear rate applied. A recently developed extension of the MM model is reported by Minale (M model(2)) where the effect of the confinement is included by using the Shapira-Haber correction.3 Further extending this M model, by incorporating an effective viscosity as originally proposed by Choi and Showalter,4 we arrive at the mM model that accurately describes the experiments of blends in confined flow.  相似文献   

4.
In this study the potential ability of food-grade particles (at the droplet interface) to enhance the oxidative stability was investigated. Sunflower oil-in-water emulsions (20%), stabilised solely by food-grade particles (Microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) and modified starch (MS)), were produced under different processing conditions and their physicochemical properties were studied over time. Data on droplet size, surface charge, creaming index and oxidative stability were obtained. Increasing the food-grade particle concentration from 0.1% to 2.5% was found to decrease droplet size, enhance the physical stability of emulsions and reduce the lipid oxidation rate due to the formation of a thicker interfacial layer around the oil droplets. It was further shown that, MCC particles were able to reduce the lipid oxidation rate more effectively than MS particles. This was attributed to their ability to scavenge free radicals, through their negative charge, and form thicker interfacial layers around oil droplets due to the particles size differences. The present study demonstrates that the manipulation of emulsions' interfacial microstructure, based on the formation of a thick interface around the oil droplets by food-grade particles (Pickering emulsions), is an effective approach to slow down lipid oxidation.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of substituting native beta-lactoglobulin B (beta-lactoglobulin) with heat-treated beta-lactoglobulin as emulsifier in oil in water emulsions were investigated. The emulsions were prepared with a dispersed phase volume fraction of Phi=0.6, and accordingly, oil droplets rather closely packed. Native beta-lactoglobulin and beta-lactoglobulin heated at 69 degrees C for 30 and 45 min, respectively, in aqueous solution at pH 7.0 were compared. Molar mass determination of the species formed upon heating as well as measurements of surface hydrophobicity and adsorption to a planar air/water interface were made. The microstructure of the emulsions was characterized using confocal laser scanning microscopy, light scattering measurements of oil droplet sizes, and assessment of the amount of protein adsorbed to surfaces of oil droplets. Furthermore, oil droplet interactions in the emulsions were quantified rheologically by steady shear and small and large amplitude oscillatory shear measurements. Adsorption of heated and native beta-lactoglobulin to oil droplet surfaces was found to be rather similar while the rheological properties of the emulsions stabilized by heated beta-lactoglobulin and the emulsions stabilized by native beta-lactoglobulin were remarkably different. A 200-fold increase in the zero-shear viscosity and elastic modulus and a 10-fold increase in yield stress were observed when emulsions were stabilized by heat-modified beta-lactoglobulin instead of native beta-lactoglobulin. Aggregates with a radius of gyration in the range from 25 to 40 nm, formed by heating of beta-lactoglobulin, seem to increase oil droplet interactions. Small quantities of emulsifier substituted with aggregates have a major impact on the rheology of oil in water emulsions that consist of rather closely packed oil droplets.  相似文献   

6.
Results of a complete study of the rheological properties of highly concentrated emulsions of the w/o type with the content of the dispersed phase up to 96% are reported. The aqueous phase is a supersaturated solution of nitrates, where the water content does not exceed 20%. Dispersed droplets are characterized by a polyhedral shape and a broad size distribution. Highly concentrated emulsions exhibit the properties of rheopectic media. In steady-state regimes of shearing, these emulsions behave as viscoplastic materials with a clearly expressed yield stress. Highly concentrated emulsions are characterized by elasticity due to the compressed state of droplets. Shear storage modulus is constant in a wide range of frequencies that reflect solid-like behavior of such emulsions at small deformations. The storage (dynamic) modulus coincides with the elastic modulus measured in terms of the reversible deformations after the cessation of creep. Normal stresses appear in the shearing. In the low shear rate domain, normal stresses do not depend on shear rate, so that it can be assumed that they have nothing in common with normal stresses arising owing to the Weissenberg effect. These normal stresses can be attributed to Reynolds’ dilatancy (elastic dilatancy). Normal stresses sharply decrease beyond some threshold value of the shear rate and slightly increase only in a high shear rate domain. Observed anomalous flow curves and unusual changes of normal stresses with shear rate are explained by the two-step model of emulsion flow. Direct optical observations show that emulsions move by the mechanism of the rolling of larger droplets over smaller ones without noticeable changes of their shape at low shear rates, while strong distortions of the droplet shape is evident at high shear rates. The transition from one mechanism to the other is attributed to a certain critical value of the capillary number. The concentration dependence of the elastic modulus (as well as the yield stress) can be described by the Princen-Kiss model, but this model fails to predict the droplet size dependence of the elastic modulus. Numerous experiments demonstrated that the modulus and yield stress are proportional to the squared reciprocal size, while the Princen-Kiss model predicts their linear dependence on the reciprocal size. A new model based on dimensional arguments is proposed. This model correctly describes the influence of the main structural parameters on the rheological properties of highly concentrated emulsions. The boundaries of the domain of highly concentrated emulsions are estimated on the basis of the measurement of their elasticity and yield stress.  相似文献   

7.
The objective of this study was to establish the influence of polyelectrolyte characteristics (molecular weight and charge density) on the properties of oil-in-water emulsions containing oil droplets surrounded by surfactant-polyelectrolyte layers. A surfactant-stabilized emulsion containing small droplets (d32 approximately 0.3 microm) was prepared by homogenizing 20 wt% corn oil with 80 wt% emulsifier solution (20 mM SDS or 2.5 wt% Tween 20, 100 mM acetate buffer, pH 3) using a high-pressure valve homogenizer. This primary emulsion was then diluted with various chitosan solutions to produce secondary emulsions with a range of chitosan concentrations (3 wt% corn oil, 0-1 wt% chitosan). The influence of the molecular characteristics of chitosan on the properties of these emulsions was examined by using chitosan ingredients with different molecular weights (MW approximately 15, 145, and 200 kDa) and degree of deacetylation (DDA approximately 40, 77, and 92%). The electrical charge and particle size of the secondary emulsions were then measured. Extensive droplet aggregation occurred when the chitosan concentration was below the amount required to saturate the droplet surfaces, but stable emulsions could be formed at higher chitosan concentrations. The zeta-potential and mean diameter (d32) of the particles in the secondary emulsions was not strongly influenced by chitosan MW, however the chitosan with the lowest DDA (40%) produced droplets with smaller mean diameters and zeta-potentials than the other two DDA samples examined. Interestingly, we found that stable multilayer emulsions could be formed by mixing medium or high MW chitosan with an emulsion stabilized by a non-ionic surfactant (Tween 20) due to the fact the initial droplets had some negative charge. The information obtained from this study is useful for preparing emulsions stabilized by multilayer interfacial layers.  相似文献   

8.
The objective of this study was to establish the optimum conditions for preparing stable oil-in-water emulsions containing droplets surrounded by surfactant-chitosan layers. A primary emulsion containing small droplets (d32 approximately = 0.3 microm) was prepared by homogenizing 20 wt% corn oil with 80 wt% emulsifier solution (20 mM SDS, 100 mM acetate buffer, pH 3) using a high-pressure valve homogenizer. The primary emulsion was diluted with chitosan solutions to produce secondary emulsions with a range of oil and chitosan concentrations (0.5-10 wt% corn oil, 0-1 wt% chitosan, pH 3). The secondary emulsions were sonicated to help disrupt any droplet aggregates formed during the mixing process. The electrical charge, particle size, and amount of free chitosan in the emulsions were then measured. The droplet charge changed from negative to positive as the amount of chitosan in the emulsions was increased, reaching a relatively constant value (approximately +50 mV) above a critical chitosan concentration (C(Sat)), which indicated that saturation of the droplet surfaces with chitosan occurred. Extremely large droplet aggregates were formed at chitosan concentrations below C(Sat), but stable emulsions could be formed above C(Sat) provided the droplet concentration was not high enough for depletion flocculation to occur. Interestingly, we found that stable multilayer emulsions could also be formed by mixing chitosan with an emulsion stabilized by a nonionic surfactant (Tween 20) due to the fact the initial droplets had some negative charge. The information obtained from this study is useful for preparing emulsions stabilized by multilayer interfacial layers.  相似文献   

9.
The preparation of nonspherical materials composed of separated multicomponents by droplet‐based microfluidics remains a challenge. Based on polymerization‐induced phase separation and droplet coalescence in microfluidics, we prepared emulsions of variously shaped PAM/PEG core/shell droplets and hydrogels composed of two separated components, which show flexible and transformable hierarchical structures and microarchitectures. We find that AM/PEG aqueous droplets form a core/shell structure after polymerization resulting from phase separation. Thus multicore/shell droplets are easily produced by coalescence of core/shell structures. By changing the polymerization temperature and the flow rate, the morphology of the multicore droplets and the hydrogel can be easily adjusted. The hydrogels exhibit apparent anisotropy and different protein release rates depending on their structures. The preparation technique is simple and versatile and the resulting hydrogels have potential applications in many fields.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) on the flocculation of droplets in 20 wt.% soybean oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by whey protein isolate (WPI) was investigated by light scattering, rheology and creaming measurements. The SDS concentrations used were low enough to prevent depletion flocculation by surfactant micelles and extensive protein displacement. In the absence of SDS, emulsions were prone to droplet flocculation near the isoelectric point of the proteins (4<pH<6), but were stable at a higher and lower pH. Flocculation led to an increase in emulsion viscosity, pronounced shear thinning behavior and accelerated creaming. When the surfactant-to-protein molar ratio was increased from 0 to 10, the emulsion instability range shifted to lower pH values due to binding of the negatively charged SDS molecules to the droplets. Our results indicate that the physicochemical properties of protein-stabilized emulsions can be modified by utilizing surfactant–protein interactions.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of environmental conditions (pH, NaCl, CaCl2, and temperature) on the properties and stability of oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions containing oil droplets surrounded by one-, two-, or three-layer interfacial membranes has been investigated. Three oil-in-water emulsions were prepared with the same droplet concentration and buffer (5 wt % corn oil, 5 mM phosphate buffer, pH 6) but with different biopolymers: (i) primary emulsion: 0.5 wt % beta-Lg; (ii) secondary emulsion: 0.5 wt % beta-Lg, 0.1 wt % iota-carrageenan; (iii) tertiary emulsion: 0.5 wt % beta-Lg, 0.1 wt % iota-carrageenan, 0-2 wt % gelatin. The secondary and tertiary emulsions were prepared by electrostatic deposition of the charged biopolymers onto the surfaces of the oil droplets so as to form two- and three-layer interfacial membranes, respectively. The stability of the emulsions to pH (3-8), sodium chloride (0-500 mM), calcium chloride (0-12 mM), and thermal processing (30-90 degrees C) was determined. We found that multilayer emulsions had better stability to droplet aggregation than single-layer emulsions under certain environmental conditions and that one or more of the biopolymer layers could be made to desorb from the droplet surfaces in response to specific environmental changes (e.g., high salt or high temperature). These results suggest that the interfacial engineering technology used in this study could lead to the creation of food emulsions with improved stability to environmental stresses or to emulsions with triggered release characteristics.  相似文献   

12.
The perceived quality of many commercial products that are based on emulsions is determined by their color. In this article, a theory is presented to relate the color of emulsions to their composition and microstructure. First, the scattering characteristics (Qs and g) of individual droplets are calculated using Mie Theory. Second, the scattering (S) and absorption (K) coefficients of a concentrated emulsion are calculated using radiative transfer theory. Third, the reflectance spectrum (R) of the emulsion is calculated using Kubelka-Munk Theory. Finally, the tristimulus coordinates (XYZ, or L*a*b*) of the emulsion are calculated using color theory. There is excellent agreement between theoretical predictions and experimental measurements of the influence of droplet and chromophore characteristics on the tristimulus coordinates of concentrated oil-in-water emulsions.  相似文献   

13.
Silica particles are dispersed in the continuous phase of bitumen-in-water emulsions. The mixture remains dispersed in quiescent storage conditions. However, rapid destabilization occurs once a shear is applied. Observations under the microscope reveal that the bitumen droplets form a colloidal gel and coalesce upon application of a shear. We follow the kinetic evolution of the emulsions viscosity, eta, at constant shear rate: eta remains initially constant and exhibits a dramatic increase after a finite time, tau. We study the influence of various parameters on the evolution of tau: bitumen droplet size and volume fraction, silica diameter and concentration, shear rate, etc.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of thermal processing on droplet flocculation in oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by either beta-lactoglobulin (primary emulsions) or beta-lactoglobulin-iota-carrageenan (secondary emulsions) at pH 6 has been investigated. In the absence of salt, the zeta-potential of the primary emulsion was less negative (-40 mV) than that of the secondary emulsion (-55 mV) due to adsorption of anionic iota-carrageenan to the anionic beta-Lg-coated droplet surfaces. The zeta-potential and mean diameter (d(43) approximately 0.3 microm) of droplets in primary and secondary emulsions did not change after storage at temperatures ranging from 30 to 90 degrees C. In the presence of 150 mM NaCl, the zeta-potential of the primary emulsion was much less negative (-27 mV) than that of the secondary emulsion (-50 mV), suggesting that the latter was less influenced by electrostatic screening effects. The zeta-potential of the primary emulsions did not change after storage at elevated temperatures (30-90 degrees C). The zeta-potential of the secondary emulsions became less negative, and the aqueous phase iota-carrageenan concentration increased at storage temperatures exceeding 50 degrees C, indicating iota-carrageenan desorbed from the beta-Lg-coated droplets. In the primary emulsions, appreciable droplet flocculation (d(43) approximately 8 microm) occurred at temperatures below the thermal denaturation temperature (T(m)) of the adsorbed proteins due to surface denaturation, while more extensive flocculation (d(43) > 20 microm) occurred above T(m) due to thermal denaturation. In the secondary emulsions, the extent of droplet flocculation below T(m) was reduced substantially (d(43) approximately 0.8 microm), which was attributed to the ability of adsorbed carrageenan to increase droplet-droplet repulsion. However, extensive droplet flocculation was observed above T(m) because carrageenan desorbed from the droplet surfaces. Differential scanning calorimetry showed that iota-carrageenan and beta-Lg interacted strongly in aqueous solutions containing 0 mM NaCl, but not in those containing 150 mM NaCl, presumably because salt weakened the electrostatic attraction between the molecules.  相似文献   

15.
The influence of an applied DC electric field on viscosity and droplet size distribution of different water‐in‐crude oil emulsions was monitored in order to investigate the induction of coalescence of the water droplets. The effects caused by the voltage imposition were studied by rheological analysis and the validity of the obtained results was discussed, comparing with the features of real electrocoalcscer systems. A low field NMR technique (CPMG NMR) and digital video microscopy (DVM) were used to elucidate the behavior of the emulsions. Experiments performed at low shear rate with increasing electric field magnitude showed an increase in viscosity until a critical value. ECRIT was reached. Thereafter coalescence occurred and viscosity decreased irreversibly below its initial value. The electrorheological behavior of the emulsions can be attributed to the organization (flocculation) of water droplets induced by the electric field, accompanied by an increase in viscosity. The structure breaks down as the shear rate is increased, leading to a decrease in viscosity. Experiments performed at high shear showed only a small decline in the viscosity. Although it was evident that coalescence took place, it did not involve the whole sample, because the electrodes were uncoated. As a direct consequence, the mean value of the droplet size within the emulsion did not change noticeably. Nonetheless this mean value was less recurrent and the formation of droplets of very large diameter occurred.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of protein concentration and order of addition relative to homogenization (before or after) on the extent of droplet flocculation in heat-treated oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by a globular protein were examined using laser diffraction. n-Hexadecane (10 wt%) oil-in-water emulsions (pH 7, 150 mM NaCl) stabilized by beta-lactoglobulin (beta-Lg) were prepared by three methods: (1) 4 mg/mL beta-Lg added before homogenization; (2) 4 mg/mL beta-Lg added before homogenization and 6 mg/mL beta-Lg added after homogenization; (3) 10 mg/mL beta-Lg added before homogenization. The emulsions were then subjected to various isothermal heat treatments (30-95 degrees C for 20 min), with the 150 mM NaCl being added either before or after heating. Emulsion 1 contained little nonadsorbed protein and exhibited extensive droplet aggregation at all temperatures, which was attributed to the fact that the droplets had a high surface hydrophobicity, e.g., due to exposed oil or extensive protein surface denaturation. Emulsions 2 and 3 contained a significant fraction of nonadsorbed beta-Lg. When the NaCl was added before heating, these emulsions were relatively stable to droplet flocculation below a critical holding temperature (75 and 60 degrees C, respectively) but showed extensive flocculation above this temperature. The stability at low temperatures was attributed to the droplets having a relatively low surface hydrophobicity, e.g., due to complete saturation of the droplet surface with protein or due to more limited surface denaturation. The instability at high temperatures was attributed to thermal denaturation of the adsorbed and nonadsorbed proteins leading to increased hydrophobic interactions between droplets. When the salt was added to Emulsions 2 and 3 after heating, little droplet flocculation was observed at high temperatures, which was attributed to the dominance of intra-membrane over inter-membrane protein-protein interactions. Our data suggests that protein concentration and order of addition have a strong influence on the flocculation stability of protein-stabilized emulsions, which has important implications for the formulation and production of many emulsion-based products.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of droplet flocculation on the creaming stability of monodisperse n-hexadecane oil-in-water emulsions was studied. The creaming velocity of emulsions with different droplet radii (0.43 and 0.86 μm), droplet concentrations (1-67 vol%), and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) concentrations (7-80 mM) were measured. Depletion flocculation was observed in the emulsions when the aqueous phase SDS concentration exceeded a particular level ( approximately 40 mM for 0.43-μm droplets and approximately 15 mM for 0.86-μm droplets). Creaming was monitored by measuring the back-scattered light from an emulsion as a function of its height. The creaming velocity increased with increasing flocculation and decreased with increasing droplet concentration. These results have important implications for the formulation of emulsion-based materials. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.  相似文献   

18.
The size of droplets in emulsions is important in many industrial, biological, and environmental systems, as it determines the stability, rheology, and area available in the emulsion for physical or chemical processes that occur at the interface. While the balance of fluid inertia and surface tension in determining droplet size under turbulent mixing in the inertial subrange has been well established, the classical scaling prediction by Shinnar half a century ago of the dependence of droplet size on the viscosity of the continuous phase in the viscous subrange has not been clearly validated in experiment. By employing extremely stable suspensions of highly viscous oils as the continuous phase and using a particle video microscope (PVM) probe and a focused beam reflectance method (FBRM) probe, we report measurements spanning 2 orders of magnitude in the continuous phase viscosity for the size of droplets in water-in-oil emulsions. The wide range in measurements allowed identification of a scaling regime of droplet size proportional to the inverse square root of the viscosity, consistent with the viscous subrange theory of Shinnar. A single curve for droplet size based on the Reynolds and Weber numbers is shown to accurately predict droplet size for a range of shear rates, mixing geometries, interfacial tensions, and viscosities. Viscous subrange control of droplet size is shown to be important for high viscous shear stresses, i.e., very high shear rates, as is desirable or found in many industrial or natural processes, or very high viscosities, as is the case in the present study.  相似文献   

19.
Oils containing both fluorescent semiconductor and magnetic oxide nanoparticles are used to produce oil in water emulsions. This technique produces oil droplets with homogeneous fluorescence and high magnetic nanoparticle concentrations. The optical properties of the oil droplets are studied as a function of the droplet sizes for various concentrations of fluorescent and magnetic nanoparticles. For all concentrations tested, we find a linear variation of the droplet fluorescent intensity as a function of the droplet volume. For a given size and a given quantum dot (QD) concentration, the droplet fluorescence intensity drops sharply as a function of the magnetic nanoparticle concentration. We show that this decrease is due mainly to the strong absorption cross section of the magnetic nanoparticles and to a lesser extent to the dynamic and static quenching of the QD fluorescence. The role of the iron oxide nanoparticle localization in the droplet (surface versus volume) is also discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Fluorocarbon-in-water emulsions are being explored clinically as synthetic oxygen carriers in general surgery. Stabilizing fluorocarbon emulsions against coarsening is critical in maintaining the biocompatibility of the formulation following intravenous administration. It has been purported that the addition of a small percentage of long-chain triglyceride results in stabilization of fluorocarbon emulsions via formation of a three-phase emulsion. In a three-phase emulsion, the triglyceride forms a layer around the dispersed fluorocarbon, thereby improving the adhesion of the phospholipid surfactant to the dispersed phase. In the present study, we examined the effect of triglyceride addition on the physicochemical characteristics of the resulting complex dispersion. In particular, we examined the particle composition and stability of the dispersed particles using a method which first fractionates (classifies) the different particles prior to sizing (i.e., sedimentation field-flow fractionation). It was determined that the addition of a long-chain triglyceride (soybean oil) results in oil demixing and two distinct populations of emulsion droplets. The presence of the two types of emulsion droplets is not observed via light scattering techniques, since the triglyceride droplets dominate the scattering due to a large difference in the refractive index between the particles and the medium as compared to fluorocarbon droplets. The growth of the fractionated fluorocarbon emulsion droplets was followed over time, and it was found that there was no difference in growth rates with and without added triglyceride. In contrast, addition of medium-chain-triglyceride (MCT) oils results in a single population of emulsion droplets (i.e., a three-phase emulsion). These emulsions are not stable to droplet coalescence, however, as significant penetration of MCT into the phospholipid lipid interfacial layer results in a negative increment in the monolayer spontaneous curvature, thereby favoring water-in-oil emulsions and resulting in destabilization of the emulsion to the effects of terminal heat sterilization or mechanical stress.  相似文献   

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