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1.
Constituents of egg yolk are key ingredients of many food emulsions. They contribute to create an interfacial film between oil and water, which determines largely the characteristics of the emulsions. Food emulsions prepared with yolk are made at various pHs. However, the effect of pH on the adsorption of yolk constituents and on the composition of the interfacial film is not known. The present study deals with the influence of pH (3, 6 and 9), on protein interface concentration and composition, change in interfacial tension, and oil droplet diameter, of emulsions made with yolk. Emulsions were prepared as follows: 0.5% w/v of yolk; oil volume fraction: 0.375, homogenisation rate: 20 000 rpm/2 min. pH 6 provided the best conditions to prepare emulsion with yolk. The average diameter of oil droplets was lower at pH 6 (8.5 μm) than at pH 3 (11.8 μm) and pH 9 (13.5 μm). The interfacial protein concentration was higher at pH 6 (1.7 mg m−2) than at pH 3 and pH 9 (0.5 mg m−2). At pH 6, all the proteins of yolk, except phosvitin, were adsorbed at the interface and the interfacial tension at steady-state was lower (10 mN m−1) than at pH 3 (15 mN m−1) and pH 9 (30 mN m−1). At pH 3, proteins at the interface are mainly phosvitin, and, at pH 9, some apoproteins of LDL and HDL. The pH modulates the composition of yolk proteins at the interface, mainly by modifying the net charge of the proteins causing their repulsion or dimerisation.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Mayonnaise is a semisolid oil-in-water emulsion comprised of egg yolk, oil, and vinegar. One main problem with mayonnaise is its high fat content, so efforts have been made to develop low-fat sauces with similar characteristics to real mayonnaise. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) blended with edible oil (soybean and olive oil) on the rheological, physicochemical, and sensory properties of low-fat mayonnaise. The results revealed that the shear viscosity decreased with the increase in medium-chain fatty acid (MCFA) contents and decreased with an increasing shear rate. Tan δ was <1, and a semisolid fluid with shear-thinning behavior was formed. The oscillation frequency test showed that the MCFA-containing mayonnaise was viscoelastic. The particle size and oil droplet analyses revealed that the emulsion droplet size and distribution were not significantly different in the MCT group compared to the control. The sensory evaluation demonstrated that the MCFA-containing mayonnaise was acceptable. This study illustrates that MCTs are a good substitute to produce the proper physicochemical properties of mayonnaise.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The knowledge on the factors affecting the heat-induced physicochemical changes of milk proteins and milk protein stabilized oil-in-water emulsions has been advanced for the last decade. Most of the studies have emphasized on the understanding of how milk-protein-stabilized droplets and the non-adsorbed proteins determine the physicochemical and rheological properties of protein-concentrated dairy colloids. The physical stability of concentrated protein-stabilized emulsions (i.e., against creaming or phase separation/gelation after heat treatment) can be modulated by carefully controlling the colloidal properties of the protein-stabilized droplets and the non-adsorbed proteins in the aqueous phase. This article focusses on the review of the physical stability of concentrated milk protein-stabilized oil-in-water emulsions as influenced by physicochemical factors, interparticle interactions (i.e., protein–protein, and droplet–droplet interactions) and processing conditions. Emphasis has been given to the recent advances in the formation, structure and physical stability of oil-in-water emulsions prepared with all types of milk proteins, reviewing in particular the impact of pre- and post-homogenization heat treatments. In addition, the importance of common components found in the continuous phase of heat-treated nutritional emulsions that can promote aggregation (polymers, sugars, minerals) will be highlighted. Finally, the routes of manipulating the steric stabilization of these emulsions to control heat-induced aggregation—through protein–surfactant, protein–protein, protein–polysaccharide interactions and through the incorporation of protein based colloidal particles—are reviewed.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of this works is to study an oil-in-water emulsion stabilized with a triblock copolymer Synperonic F127 which presents a double size distribution of oil droplets. The emulsions were studied experimentally by means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic light scattering (DLS). The DSC analysis was carried out focusing on the cooling behavior of the emulsion. The cooling thermograms of the oil-in-water emulsion revealed two crystallization peaks with Gaussian profile; the interesting characteristic is that both peaks are separated in temperature. In accordance to previous works for a single oil dispersed within an aqueous phase, the DSC technique must show a single Gaussian peak of crystallization attributable to a size distribution of droplets. In the present case of emulsions stabilized with 1 g/L of Synperonic F127, the aggregation behavior of triblock as a function of temperature allows to produce an emulsion with a double size droplet distribution. Comparison with emulsions stabilized with 2 and 4 wt% of non-ionic Tween 20 are also presented.  相似文献   

7.
Adsorption characteristics of mixtures of egg yolk lipoproteins and whey protein isolate (WPI) were studied in emulsions (20% oil, v/v 0.5% protein, w/v pH 7.0) made with pure triolein or n-tetradecane. Emulsions stabilized by granule lipoproteins (GLP) or low-density lipoproteins (LDL) had smaller particle sizes than emulsions stabilized by WPI. In protein mixtures containing egg yolk lipoproteins and WPI, there was a decrease in particle size with increased concentration of the yolk lipoproteins. The reduction in particle size of emulsions was greater when WPI was mixed with LDL than with GLP, for both n-tetradecane and triolein. Emulsions made with triolein had smaller particle sizes than those made with n-tetradecane, irrespective of the type or ratio of lipoproteins used. Therefore, the protein concentration per unit area of the interface was greater for emulsions containing n-tetradecane than for triolein. In displacement experiments, emulsions made with only WPI were mixed with 0.1 and 0.5% GLP or LDL for a given period of time and the relative concentrations of β-lactoglobulin and -lactalbumin determined. Displacement of β-lactoglobulin by LDL increased with time and was greater in emulsions made with n-tetradecane than with triolein. However, displacement of β-lactoglobulin by GLP was greater in emulsions made with triolein than with n-tetradecane. -lactalbumin was completely displaced from the interface within 1 min of addition of either 0.5% GLP or LDL, whereas addition of 0.1% GLP or LDL resulted only in a partial displacement. The results suggest that egg yolk lipoproteins are more surface active than WPI and that LDL penetrates the n-tetradecane–water interface more than GLP, while GLP penetrates the triolein–water interface more than LDL.  相似文献   

8.
The influence of the nature of the interfacial membrane on the kinetics of droplet growth in hydrocarbon oil-in-water emulsions was investigated. Droplet growth rates were determined by measuring changes in the droplet size distribution of 1 wt % n-tetradecane or n-octadecane oil-in-water emulsions using laser diffraction. The interfacial properties of the droplets were manipulated by coating them with either an SDS layer or with an SDS-chitosan layer using an electrostatic deposition method. The emulsion containing SDS-coated octadecane droplets did not exhibit droplet growth during storage for 400 h, which showed that it was stable to Ostwald ripening because of this oils extremely low water-solubility. The emulsion containing SDS-coated n-tetradecane droplets showed a considerable increase in mean droplet size with time, which was attributed to Ostwald ripening associated with this oils appreciable water-solubility. On the other hand, an emulsion containing SDS-chitosan coated n-tetradecane droplets was stable to droplet growth, which was attributed to the ability of the interfacial membrane to resist deformation because of its elastic modulus and thickness. This study shows that the stability of emulsion droplets to Ostwald ripening can be improved by using an electrostatic deposition method to form thick elastic membranes around the droplets.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The droplet size distribution (DSD) of emulsions is the result of two competitive effects that take place during emulsification process, i.e., drop breakup and drop coalescence, and it is influenced by the formulation and composition variables, i.e., nature and amount of emulsifier, mixing characteristics, and emulsion preparation, all of which affect the emulsion stability. The aim of this study is to characterize oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions (droplet size and stability) in terms of surfactant concentration and surfactant composition (sodium dodecyl benzene sulphonate (SDBS)/Tween 80 mixture). Ultraviolet-visible (UV-vis) transmission spectroscopy has been applied to obtain droplet size and stability of the emulsions and the verification of emulsion stability with the relative cleared volume technique (time required for a certain amount of emulsion to separate as a cleared phase). It is demonstrated that the DSD of the emulsions is a function of the oil concentration and the surfactant composition with higher stability for emulsions prepared with higher SDBS ratio and lower relative cleared volume with the time. Results also show that smaller oil droplets are generated with increasing Tween 80 ratio and emulsifier concentration.  相似文献   

11.
A laboratory study was conducted to evaluate the effect of pH on the stability of oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by a commercial splittable surfactant Triton SP-190 by comparison with the results obtained by a common surfactant Triton X-100. The emulsion stability was explored by measuring the volume of oil phase separated and the size of the dispersed droplets. It was found that the addition of inorganic acids did not significantly affect the stability of emulsions stabilized by Triton X-100, but had a profound influence on the stability of emulsions stabilized by Triton SP-190. Moreover, the droplet size of a Triton X-100-stabilized emulsion and its dynamic interfacial activity were insensitive to acids. However, at lower pH the droplet size of the emulsions stabilized by Triton SP-190 was considerably increased. From the dynamic interfacial tension measurements the dynamic interfacial activity of Triton SP-190 at the oil/water interface was found to be strongly inhibited by the addition of acids, resulting in a slower decreasing rate of dynamic interfacial tension. The results demonstrate that the dramatic destabilization of Triton SP-190-stabilized emulsions could be realized by the use of acids, which evidently changed the interfacial properties of the surfactant and resulted in a higher coalescence rate of oil droplets.  相似文献   

12.
Diacylglycerol (DAG)/water and triacylglycerol (TAG)/water emulsions were prepared using beta-lactoglobulin (beta-LG) as an emulsifier. The oil phase (20% in emulsion) was mixed with beta-LG solution (1% beta-LG in water, pH 7) to prepare the emulsions. A fine oil-in-water emulsion was produced from both DAG and TAG oils. The interfacial protein concentration of the TAG emulsion was higher than that of the DAG emulsion. The zeta potential of the DAG oil droplet was higher than that of the TAG oil droplet. The front-surface fluorescence spectroscopy results revealed that tryptophan residues in beta-LG moved to the more hydrophobic environment during the adsorption of protein on the oil droplet surfaces. Changes in secondary structure of beta-LG during the adsorption were determined by FT-IR spectroscopy. Decreases in the beta-sheet content concomitant with increases in the alpha-helix content were observed during the adsorption to the oil droplets, and the degree of structural change was greater for beta-LG in the TAG emulsion than in the DAG emulsion, indicating the increased unfolding of adsorbed beta-LG on the TAG oil droplet surface. Results of interfacial tension measurement supported this speculation, that is, the increased unfolding of the protein at the TAG-water interface. Trypsin- and proteinase K-catalyzed proteolysis was used to probe the topography of the adsorbed beta-LG on the oil droplet surface. SDS-PAGE analyses of liberated peptides after the proteolysis indicated the higher susceptibility of beta-LG adsorbed on the DAG oil droplet surface than on the TAG oil droplet surface. On the basis of all the results, we discussed the conformation of the adsorbed beta-LG on the two oil droplet surfaces.  相似文献   

13.
14.
An oil-in-water emulsion (5 wt% corn oil, 0.5 wt% beta-lactoglobulin (beta-Lg), 0.1 wt% iota-carrageenan, 5 mM phosphate buffer, pH 6.0) containing anionic droplets stabilized by interfacial membranes comprising of beta-lactoglobulin and iota-carrageenan was produced using a two-stage process. A primary emulsion containing anionic beta-Lg coated droplets was prepared by homogenizing oil and emulsifier solution together using a high-pressure valve homogenizer. A secondary emulsion containing beta-Lg-iota-carrageenan coated droplets was formed by mixing the primary emulsion with an aqueous iota-carrageenan solution. The stability of primary and secondary emulsions to sodium chloride (0-500 mM), calcium chloride (0-12 mM), and thermal processing (30-90 degrees C) were analyzed using zeta-potential, particle size and creaming stability measurements. The secondary emulsion had better stability to droplet aggregation than the primary emulsion at NaCl 相似文献   

15.
张源  梁启富  张小兵  刘峰 《应用化学》2012,29(1):106-112
以辛烯基琥珀酸淀粉钠和油酸甲酯分别为替代乳化剂和溶剂,采用浓缩乳化法制备了高度稳定的2.5%高效氯氟氰菊酯水乳剂,通过测定乳液油滴粒径分布,结合乳液外观研究了乳化方法、预处理液中辛烯基琥珀酸淀粉钠质量分数、转速和剪切时间等工艺条件对乳液稳定性的影响.研究结果表明,辛烯基琥珀酸淀粉钠对油酸甲酯具有较好乳化效果,以其为乳化剂可制备高度稳定的2.5%高效氯氟氰菊酯水乳剂,油滴平均粒径在1.2 μm左右,且加速试验[即(54±2)℃密封14 d]和常温储存6个月后平均粒径仅增长了0.1~0.3μm,外观无变化;采用浓缩乳化法且预处理液中辛烯基琥珀酸淀粉钠质量分数在15%~25%时乳液稳定性较好,提高转速可降低油滴平均粒径,但对乳液均一性无显著影响,延长剪切时间对油滴平均粒径影响不大,但有利于提高乳液均一性;辛烯基琥珀酸淀粉钠为乳化剂制备的高效氯氟氰菊酯水乳剂稳定性优于常规水乳剂.  相似文献   

16.
The mean diameter of emulsion droplets prepared using three different emulsifiers (egg yolk lecithin alone, egg yolk lysolecithin alone, and a mixture of egg yolk lecithin and lysolecithin) was investigated. Considering the nasal administration of enteral nutrients or that through gastric/jejunal fistulae, the stability of each emulsion with artificial gastric fluid (pH 1.2) or intestinal fluid (pH 6.8) was investigated. When adding artificial intestinal fluid, all emulsions prepared with various emulsifiers (egg yolk lecithin, egg yolk lysolecithin, soybean lecithin, soybean lysolecithin, DK ester® F-140, and Sunsoft® A-141E) were stable. On the other hand, when adding artificial gastric fluid, emulsions prepared with egg yolk lysolecithin or Sunsoft® A-141E were stable, but there was a reduction in the stability of emulsions prepared with the other emulsifiers, with an increase in the particle size. Based on these results, we prepared an emulsion using a natural component-derived emulsifier for enteral nutrients, egg yolk lysolecithin, and clarified the pH change-related stability of the emulsion.  相似文献   

17.
A novel method for preparing a finely dispersed oil-in-water emulsion is proposed. Octanoic acid dissolved in water at a high temperature of 220 or 230 degrees C at 15 MPa was combined with an aqueous solution of a surfactant and then the mixture was cooled. When a nonionic surfactant, decaglycerol monolaurate (ML-750) or polyoxyethylene sorbitan monolaurate (Tween 20), was used, fine emulsions with a median oil droplet diameter of 100 nm or less were successfully prepared at ML-750 and Tween 20 concentrations of 0.083% (w/v) and 0.042%, respectively, or higher. The diameters were much smaller than those of oil droplets prepared by the conventional homogenization method using a rotor/stator homogenizer. However, an anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate, was not adequate for the preparation of such fine emulsions by the proposed method. Although the interfacial tensions between octanoic acid and the surfactant solutions were measured at different temperatures, they were not an indication for selecting a surfactant for the successful preparation of the fine emulsion by the proposed method.  相似文献   

18.
Ultrasonic attenuation measurement is a frequently used tool for non-destructive determination of dispersion characteristics. Useful information like particle or droplet size and their concentration can be obtained, if the relation between size and attenuation of the dispersion is known. In this work, the theoretical model by Faran for the intermediate sound wave regime (IWR) is presented in combination with experimental data. In the IWR, the acoustic behavior is governed by elastic scattering rather than by dissipative effects. Experiments with emulsion of droplet sizes greater than 10 mum were carried out. Silicone oil, sunflower oil and olive oil were selected for the disperse phase of the oil-in-water emulsions. First, emulsions having droplets in the micrometer range were created. Afterwords, attenuation measurements of different concentrated emulsion were carried out. Some adjustments reflecting concentration influence were performed to outline the agreement between calculations and measurements. The validity of the model can be confirmed, if the volume fraction of the disperse phase is considered as a variable. Finally, droplet size distributions from theoretical attenuation spectra could be calculated based on a log-normal distribution.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The physicochemical properties of emulsions play an important role in food systems as they directly contribute to texture, sensory and nutritional properties of foods. Sodium caseinate (NaCas) is a well-used ingredient because of its good solubility and emulsifying properties and its stability during heating. One of most significant aspects of any food emulsion is its stability. Among the methods used to study emulsion stability it may be mentioned visual observation, ultrasound profiling, microscopy, droplet size distribution, small deformation rheometry, measurement of surface concentration to characterize adsorbed protein at the interface, nuclear magnetic resonance, confocal microscopy, diffusing wave spectroscopy, and turbiscan. They have advantages and disadvantages and provide different insights into the destabilization mechanisms. Related to stability, the aspects more deeply investigated were the amount of NaCas used to prepare the emulsion, and specially the oil-to-protein ratio, the mobility of oil droplets and the interactions among emulsion components at the interface. It is known that the amount of protein required to stabilize oil-in-water emulsions depends, not only on the structure of protein at the interface, and the average diameters of the emulsion droplets, but also on the type of oils and the composition of the aqueous phase. Several authors have investigated the effect of a thickening agent or of a surface active molecule. Factors such as pH, temperature, and processing conditions during emulsion preparation are also very relevant to stability. There is a general agreement among authors that the most stable systems are obtained for conditions that produce size reduction of the droplets, an increase in viscosity of the continuous phase and structural changes in emulsions such as gelation. All these conditions decrease the molecular mobility and slow down phase separation.  相似文献   

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