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1.
The stability of fine sodium caseinate emulsions (1 wt.% protein, 25 vol.% n-tetradecane, 20 mM imidazole, pH 7) containing various concentrations of calcium chloride has been investigated under perikinetic and orthokinetic conditions by measuring time-dependent changes in droplet-size distribution. Under quiescent storage conditions at 20°C, samples containing at least 10 mM ionic calcium added after emulsification were found to exhibit an increasing average droplet size with time and a developing bimodal droplet-size distribution. Under turbulent conditions of intense shearing, these same emulsions exhibited time-dependent flocculation and coalescence. This interpretation was confirmed by light microscopy. Emulsions prepared with up to 6 mM Ca2+ present during emulsification were stable in the presence or absence of flow, but satisfactory emulsions could not be prepared containing more than 6 mM ionic calcium. The results show that the emulsion stability is sensitive to whether the calcium ion content is adjusted before or after homogenization.  相似文献   

2.
Formation of water-in-diesel oil (w/o) nano-emulsion has been achieved by a low-energy emulsification method by stabilizing a new combination of nonionic sorbitan esters surfactants, that is PEG20-sorbitan monostearate and sorbitan monooleate in mixed proportions. Different combinations of the surfactants (T6?+?S8) have been tested and the best possible combination of mixed surfactants is found at a surfactants ratio of 35:65 (wt/wt) for T6:S8 at hydrophile–lipophile balance (HLB)?=?8.01, which resulted in smaller droplet size of 44.87?nm. A phase diagram study is performed to identify the zones of formation of transparent, translucent, and opaque emulsions (44?nm??27?m3?·?s?1. Comparison of Ostwald ripening rate with other sets of surfactants obtained by different authors showed the lowest rate among them, indicative of enhanced stability. A rheological study of the tested set of nano-emulsions depicts the Newtonian behavior (1.0371?≤?n?≤?1.0826) over a wider range of shear rates (10–1000?s?1) at different temperatures (25–40°C).  相似文献   

3.
The well-known alcoholic beverage Pastis becomes turbid when mixed with water due to the poor solubility of trans-anethol, the anise-flavored component of Pastis in the water solution formed. This destabilization appears as the formation of micrometer-sized droplets that only very slowly grow in size, thus expanding the life of the anise-flavored beverage. The slow growth has been attributed to an extremely low interfacial tension of the droplets. Fitting experimental droplet growth rates to an Ostwald ripening model, interfacial tensions were deduced in the past. Direct determination of the interfacial tensions was not yet reported on these systems. We have measured the interfacial tensions and used these data to predict droplet growth rates using an Ostwald ripening model and a model for creaming of the droplets. The interfacial tension was measured to be about 11 mN/m for a 30/70 w/w % ethanol/water mixture, and it decreases slightly to a value of 1.4 mN/m in the case of a 70/30 w/w % ethanol/water mixture. These values are not as low as those deduced in the past. The theoretical predictions for both the Ostwald ripening rates and the creaming rates, using the directly measured interfacial tensions, are found to contradict with the experimental results on Ostwald ripening and creaming. While the experiments on Ostwald ripening show an increase in stability with increasing ethanol concentration, the results based on our interfacial tension measurements in combination with the same Ostwald ripening model show a decrease in stability with an increase in ethanol concentration. Further research is needed to understand fully which parameters play a role in both droplet growth and the stability of these three-component emulsions to elucidate the current discrepancy between model and experiment. This could be useful for a better control of "spontaneous emulsification" processes.  相似文献   

4.
Controlling stability and aging of emulsions is important from commercial and scientific perspectives. Achieving such control comes through gaining an understanding of the relationship between emulsion constituents and microstructure and how these influence the kinetics and mechanism of destabilisation. We present here an investigation determining the rate of destabilisation as a function of time for a series of water/n-alkane/Triton X-100 oil-in-water emulsions. The time dependence of the emulsions was investigated using static light scattering, PFG-NMR and measurement of gross phase separation. By changing the chain length of the oil from hexane to tetradecane, an almost five orders of magnitude variation in emulsion lifetime could be achieved, while maintaining most of the other chemical and physical characteristics of the emulsions. Further, we show that while Ostwald ripening is the dominant destabilisation mechanism, two distinct regimes are evident. Initially, we observed an enhanced Ostwald ripening regime due to the presence of oil-swollen micelles in the aqueous continuum, that is a depletion flocculation mechanism is followed. The presence of oil-swollen micelles was confirmed using PFG-NMR. The micelles aid the gross oil transport between the discrete oil domains. Upon phase separation the oil-swollen micelles are predominantly removed from the emulsion along with the excess water resulting in a concomitant reduction in the ripening rate, producing the more general Ostwald ripening cubic dependence of droplet radius as a function of time for the lower molecular weight oils. The oils with higher molecular weight (decane and above), however, were observed to switch over to destabilisation via creaming. PFG-NMR was shown to be a powerful technique to fully probe emulsion microstructure as a function of time with droplet size and spacing being directly obtained from the data.  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the combined effect of ionic calcium and ethanol on the visual creaming behavior and rheology of sodium caseinate-stabilized emulsions (4 wt% protein, 30 vol% oil, pH 6.8, mean droplet diameter 0.4 microm). A range of ionic calcium concentrations, expressed as a calcium/caseinate molar ratio R, was adjusted prior to homogenization and varying concentrations of ethanol were added shortly after homogenization. A stability map was produced on the basis of visual creaming behavior over a minimum period of 8 h for different calcium/caseinate/ethanol emulsion compositions. A single narrow stable (noncreaming) region was identified, indicating limited cooperation between calcium ions and ethanol. The shear-thinning behavior of the caseinate-stabilized emulsions is typical of systems undergoing depletion flocculation. Addition of calcium ions and/or ethanol was found to lead to a pronounced reduction in viscosity and the onset of Newtonian flow. The state of aggregation was correlated with emulsion microstructure from confocal laser scanning microscopy. Time-dependent rheology (18 h) with a density-matched oil phase (1-bromohexadecane) revealed that the visually stable emulsions were time-independent low-viscosity fluids. Surface coverage data showed that increasing amounts of caseinate were associated with the oil-water interface with increasing R and ethanol content. A decrease in free calcium ions in the aqueous phase with moderate increases in R and ethanol content was observed, which is consistent with greater calcium-caseinate binding (aggregation). Ostwald ripening occurred at the high-ethanol emulsion compositions that were stable to depletion flocculation. While the coarsening rate was low, this can account for the cream plug formation observed during gravity creaming experiments. The caseinate emulsion with no ionic calcium or ethanol exhibits depletion flocculation from excess nonadsorbed caseinate submicelles. Addition of calcium ions reduces the submicelle number density via specific calcium-binding in the aqueous phase (fewer, larger calcium-caseinate aggregates) and at the droplet surface (increased surface coverage). Nonspecific ethanol-induced (calcium-dependent) caseinate submicelle aggregation in the bulk phase and on the droplet surface (increased surface coverage) culminates in a reduction in the number density of caseinate submicelles. A narrow window of inhibition of depletion flocculation occurs in systems containing both calcium ions and ethanol, both species combining to aggregate the protein and so reduce the density of free submicelles.  相似文献   

6.
We studied the spontaneous emulsification and droplet growth mechanism in trans-anethol/water/ethanol solutions, also known as the beverage ouzo, using dynamic light scattering spectroscopy. This simple ternary mixture is a generic example of a system that forms microemulsions spontaneously when brought into the two-phase region. The volume fraction of the dispersed phase was found to profoundly affect the growth rates of the droplets, which is a new finding that has not been predicted by the Lifshitz-Slyozov-Wagner theory. Time-dependent measurements show that the droplet growth is governed by Ostwald ripening (OR), and no coalescence was observed. Furthermore, the OR rates increase with increasing oil concentration at low alcohol content. We attribute this behavior to enhanced droplet-droplet interactions. At high ethanol concentrations, we found that the measured rates decreased as the oil concentration increased. The OR growth mechanism completely correlates with changes in droplet size. The kinetics of droplet growth shows that the ripening has a saturation limit at a droplet radius of about 1.5 mum. Thus, formed emulsions remain stable for months.  相似文献   

7.
The influence of interfacial crosslinking, layer thickness and layer density on the kinetics of Ostwald ripening in multilayered emulsions at different temperatures was investigated. Growth rates of droplets were measured by monitoring changes in the droplet size distributions of 0.5% (w/w) n-octane, n-decane, and n-dodecane oil-in-water emulsions using static light scattering. Lifshitz-Slyozov-Wagner theory was used to calculate Ostwald ripening rates. A sequential two step process, based on electrostatic deposition of sugar beet pectin onto fish gelatin or whey protein isolate (WPI) interfacial membranes, was used to manipulate the interfacial properties of the oil droplets. Laccase was added to the fish gelatin-beet pectin emulsions to promote crosslinking of adsorbed pectin molecules via ferulic acid groups, whereas heat was induced to promote crosslinking of WPI and helix coil transitions of fish gelatin. Ripening rates of single-layered, double-layered and crosslinked emulsions increased as the chain length of the n-alkanes decreased. Emulsions containing crosslinked fish gelatin-beet pectin coated droplets had lower droplet growth rates (3.1 ± 0.3 × 10−26 m3/s) than fish gelatin-stabilized droplets (7.3 ± 0.2 × 10−26 m3/s), which was attributed to the formation of a protective network. Results suggest that physical or enzymatic biopolymer-crosslinking of interfaces may reduce the molecular transport of alkanes between the droplets in the continuous phase.  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.
Water-in-oil emulsions with a low electrolyte content in the internal phase are unstable with respect to Ostwald ripening. The main components of the total pressure acting on the surface of internal phase droplets are considered. The equilibrium values of the diameters of dispersed phase droplets are calculated. The dependences of the difference in the osmotic and Laplace pressures on the droplet size and electrolyte concentration in the droplets are obtained. It is shown that, at the electrolyte concentration below the critical value, the number of droplets in emulsion decreases. If the concentration is above the critical value, water diffuses from small to large droplets, but their number remains unchanged. The change in NaCl concentration in the droplets of internal phase of polydisperse emulsion during the Ostwald ripening is calculated. The results of calculations correlate with the experimental data on the stability of emulsions with respect to coalescence and sedimentation.  相似文献   

10.
Impact of oil type on nanoemulsion formation and Ostwald ripening stability   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The formation of stable transparent nanoemulsions poses two challenges: the ability to initially create an emulsion where the entire droplet size distribution is below 80 nm, and the subsequent stabilization of this emulsion against Ostwald ripening. The physical properties of the oil phase and the nature of the surfactant layer were found to have a considerable impact on nanoemulsion formation and stabilization. Nanoemulsions made with high viscosity oils, such as long chain triglycerides (LCT), were considerably larger ( D = 120 nm) than nanoemulsions prepared with low viscosity oils such as hexadecane ( D = 80 nm). The optimization of surfactant architecture, and differential viscosity eta D/eta C, has led to the formation of remarkably small nanoemulsions. With average sizes below 40 nm they are some of the smallest homogenized emulsions ever reported. What is more remarkable is that LCT nanoemulsions do not undergo Ostwald ripening and are physically stable for over 3 months. Ostwald ripening is prevented by the large molar volume of long chain triglyceride oils, which makes them insoluble in water thus providing a kinetic barrier to Ostwald ripening. Examination of the Ostwald ripening of mixed oil nanoemulsions found that the entropy gain associated with oil demixing provided a thermodynamic barrier to Ostwald ripening. Not only are the nanoemulsions created in this work some of the smallest reported, but they are also thermodynamically stable to Ostwald ripening when at least 50% of the oil phase is an insoluble triglyceride.  相似文献   

11.
Premix membrane emulsification is a promising method for the production of colloidal oil-in-water emulsions as drug carrier systems for intravenous administration. The present study investigated the possibility of preparing medium-chain triglyceride emulsions with a mean particle size below 100 nm and a narrow particle size distribution using sucrose laurate as an emulsifier. To manufacture the emulsions, a coarse pre-emulsion was repeatedly extruded through alumina membranes (Anodisc) of 200 nm, 100 nm and 20 nm nominal pore size. When Anodisc membranes with 20 nm pore size were employed, nanoemulsions with z-average diameters of about 50 nm to 90 nm and polydispersity indices smaller than 0.08 could be obtained. Particle growth due to Ostwald ripening was observed over 18 weeks of storage. The Ostwald ripening rate linearly depended on the emulsifier concentration and the concentration of free emulsifier, indicating that micelles in the aqueous phase accelerated the Ostwald ripening process. Long-term stability of the nanoemulsions could be achieved by using a minimised emulsifier concentration or by osmotic stabilisation with soybean oil added in a mass ratio of 1:1 to the lipid phase.  相似文献   

12.
The purposes of this study are to determine Ostwald ripening rates in water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions and evaluate the potential application of the LSW theory to W/O emulsions. Water-in-oil emulsions were prepared by mixing water and hydrocarbon phases containing Span 83 and homogenizing. n-Heptane, n-decane, n-dodecane, and n-tetradecane were used to obtain a range of solubilities. A linear increase in the cube of the droplet size with time was observed (within the initial period of 1-2 h after emulsion preparation), supporting the LSW theory. Based on this linear relationship, Ostwald ripening rates were determined to be 3.0 x 10(-24), 2.3 x 10(-24), 1.8 x 10(-24), and 5.8 x 10(-25) m3 s(-1) for water-in-heptane, water-in-decane, water-in-dodecane, and water-in-tetradecane emulsions, respectively. These values are in agreement with theoretical predictions calculated using the LSW equation. It was observed that the ripening process gradually slowed, resulting in deviations from the LSW theory. This was attributed to the effect of the interfacial surfactant film through which the dispersed material has to diffuse during Ostwald ripening. This effect is not taken into consideration by the LSW theory. The results showed that Ostwald ripening of W/O emulsions was less sensitive to the nature of oil used and slower compared to O/W emulsions consisting of the same hydrocarbons.  相似文献   

13.
Paraffin oil-in-water nano-emulsions stabilized by Tween 80/Span 80 were prepared using the emulsion inversion point method at different emulsification temperatures. Nano-emulsions with droplet size below 200 nm were formed above a critical surfactant-to-oil ratio of 0.20 at 50 degrees C. The main destabilization mechanism of the systems was found to be Ostwald ripening. An interesting phenomenon was that the Ostwald ripening rate declined as the surfactant concentration rose. Furthermore, flocculation was also found to contribute to the instability of the nano-emulsions, especially for those with low surfactant concentrations. Study on the electrophoretic properties of emulsion droplets revealed a negative value of the zeta potential, which was strongly dependent on the pH of the systems.  相似文献   

14.
Degradation of kinetically-stable o/w emulsions   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
This article summarizes the studies on the degradation of the thermodynamically unstable o/w (nano)emulsion--a dispersion of one liquid in another, where each liquid is immiscible, or poorly miscible in the other. Emulsions are unstable exhibiting flocculation, coalescence, creaming and degradation. The physical degradation of emulsions is due to the spontaneous trend toward a minimal interfacial area between the dispersed phase and the dispersion medium. Minimizing the interfacial area is mainly achieved by two mechanisms: first coagulation possibly followed by coalescence and second by Ostwald ripening. Coalescence is often considered as the most important destabilization mechanism leading to coursing of dispersions and can be prevented by a careful choice of stabilizers. The molecular diffusion of solubilizate (Ostwald ripening), however, will continuously occur as soon as curved interfaces are present. Mass transfers in emulsion may be driven not only by differences in droplet curvatures, but also by differences in their compositions. This is observed when two or more chemically different oils are emulsified separately and the resulting emulsions are mixed. Compositional ripening involves the exchange of oil molecules between emulsion droplets with different compositions. The stability of the electrostatically- and sterically-stabilized dispersions can be controlled by the charge of the electrical double layer and the thickness of the droplet surface layer formed by non-ionic emulsifier. In spite of the similarities between electrostatically- and sterically-stabilized emulsions, there are large differences in the partitioning of molecules of ionic and non-ionic emulsifiers between the oil and water phases and the thickness of the interfacial layers at the droplet surface. The thin interfacial layer (the electrical double layer) at the surface of electrostatically stabilized droplets does not create any steric barrier for mass transfer. This may not be true for the thick interfacial layer formed by non-ionic emulsifier. The interactive sterically-stabilized oil droplets, however, can favor the transfer of materials within the intermediate agglomerates. The stability of electrosterically-stabilized emulsion is controlled by the ratio of the thickness of the non-ionic emulsifier adsorption layer (delta) to the thickness of the electrical double layer (kappa(-1)) around the oil droplets (delta/(kappa(-1))) = (deltakappa). The monomer droplet degradation can be somewhat depressed by transformation of coarse emulsions to nano-emulsion (miniemulsion) by intensive homogenization and by the addition of a surface active agent (coemulsifier) or/and a water-insoluble compound (hydrophobe). The addition of hydrophobe (hexadecane) to the dispersed phase significantly retards the rate of ripening. A long chain alcohol (coemulsifier) resulted in a marked improvement in stability, as well, which was attributed to a specific interaction between alcohol and emulsifier and to the alcohols tendency to concentrate at the o/w interface to form stronger interfacial film. The rate of ripening, according to the Lifshitz-Slyozov-Wagner (LSW) model, is directly proportional to the solubility of the dispersed phase in the dispersion medium. The increased polarity of the dispersed phase (oil) decreases the stability of the emulsion. The molar volume of solubilizate is a further parameter, which influences the stability of emulsion or the transfer of materials through the aqueous phase. The interparticle interaction is expected to favor the transfer of solubilizate located at the interfacial layer. The kinetics of solubilization of non-polar oils by ionic micelles is strongly related to the aqueous solubility of the oil phase (the diffusion approach), whilst their solubilization into non-ionic micelles can be contributed by interparticle collisions.  相似文献   

15.
The time dependence of the dynamic mobility and the ultrasonic attenuation of octane and decane oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) was measured. The emulsions grew to larger droplets due to Ostwald ripening. The growth rate measured by attenuation depends on the surfactant concentration and the polydispersity of the emulsion. At surfactant concentrations below the critical micelle concentration (cmc) of SDS, the growth was linear with time and the rate was dependent on the polydispersity of the drops; the rate was several times faster than that predicted on the basis of a diffusion growth mechanism. Above the cmc, however, as the droplets grew in size there was a point at which the rate of growth increased, which corresponds to the droplet size at which depletion forces due to the surfactant micelles become significant. Under these conditions both the electroacoustic dynamic mobility and the acoustic attenuation spectra displayed characteristics of flocs: a large decrease in the phase lag at higher frequencies in the dynamic mobility spectrum and a decrease in the attenuation coefficient at low-megahertz frequencies with an increase at higher frequencies. This depletion flocculation enhancement in ripening rates in the presence of SDS micelles provides another, alternative, and self-consistent mechanism for the effect of surfactant micelles on Ostwald ripening.  相似文献   

16.
Properties of water-in-oil (W/O) nano-emulsion formed by a low-energy emulsification method are described in this work. Nano-emulsions have been formed in water/mixed non-ionic surfactant/decane. Several mixtures of Span 20, Span 80, Tween 20 and Tween 80 were studied. Phase behavior studies and stability studies allowed to determine zones where nano-emulsions can be formed. Bluish and transparent W/O nano-emulsion with droplet sizes as low as 30 nm was formed. Nano-emulsion droplet size was measured by Dynamic Light Scattering. Nano-emulsions stability was studied by multiple light scattering and by dynamic light scattering. The results showed the evolution with time of the average radius droplet. The nano-emulsions prepared showed high kinetic stability for weeks, without phase separation, sedimentation or creaming. Nevertheless, their droplet size increased slightly over time. Stability studies show that nano-emulsion breakdown could be attributed to Ostwald ripening and coalescence mechanism, depending on the water concentration.  相似文献   

17.
The destabilizing effect of Ostwald ripening has been considered in relation to O/W hexane emulsions stabilized by sodium dodecyl sulfate. The addition of a third component to the oil phase gives rise to stability provided it has a lower vapor pressure than the oil itself. The stabilizing effects of small quantities of hexadecane and perfluorochemical oils are discussed with reference to the Kelvin effect and Raoult's law.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Two coarsening mechanisms of emulsions are well established: droplet coalescence (fusion of two droplets) and Ostwald ripening (molecular exchange through the continuous phase). Here a third mechanism is identified, contact ripening, which operates through molecular exchange upon droplets collisions. A contrast manipulated small‐angle neutron scattering experiment was performed to isolate contact ripening from coalescence and Ostwald ripening. A kinetic study was conducted, using dynamic light scattering and monodisperse nanoemulsions, to obtain the exchange key parameters. Decreasing the concentration or adding ionic repulsions between droplets hinders contact ripening by decreasing the collision frequency. Using long surfactant chains and well‐hydrated heads inhibits contact ripening by hindering fluctuations in the film. Contact ripening can be controlled by these parameters, which is essential for both emulsion formulation and delivery of hydrophobic ingredients.  相似文献   

20.
Stable carbon dioxide-in-water emulsions were formed with silica nanoparticles adsorbed at the interface. The emulsion stability and droplet size were characterized with optical microscopy, turbidimetry, and measurements of creaming rates. The increase in the emulsion stability as the silica particle hydrophilicity was decreased from 100% SiOH to 76% SiOH is described in terms of the contact angles and the resulting energies of attachment for the silica particles at the water-CO(2) interface. The emulsion stability also increased with an increase in the particle concentration, CO(2) density, and shear rate. The dominant destabilization mechanism was creaming, whereas flocculation, coalescence, and Ostwald ripening played only a minor role over the CO(2) densities investigated. The ability to stabilize these emulsions with solid particles at CO(2) densities as low as 0.739 g/mL is particularly relevant in practical applications, given the difficulty in stabilizing these emulsions with surfactants, because of the unusually weak solvation of the surfactant tails by CO(2).  相似文献   

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