Food-grade Pickering emulsions stabilised with solid lipid particles

Aleksandra Pawlik, Daniel Kurukji, Ian Norton, Fotios Spyropoulos

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

31 Citations (Scopus)
202 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Aqueous dispersions of tripalmitin particles (with the minimum size of 130 nm) were produced, via a hot sonication method, with and without the addition of food-grade emulsifiers. Depending on their relative size and chemistry, the emulsifiers altered the properties of the fat particles (e.g. crystal form, dispersion state and surface properties) by two proposed mechanisms. Firstly, emulsifiers modify the rate and/or extent of polymorphic transitions, resulting in the formation of fat crystals with a range of polarities. Secondly, the adsorption of emulsifiers at the particle interface modifies crystal surface properties. Such emulsifier-modified fat particles were then used to stabilise emulsions. As the behaviour of these particles was predisposed by the kind of emulsifier employed for their manufacture, the resulting particles showed different preferences to which of the emulsion phases (oil or water) became the continuous one. The polarity of the fat particles decreased as follows: Whey Protein Isolate > Soy Lecithin > Soy Lecithin + Tween 20 > Tween 20 > Polyglycerol Polyricinoleate > no emulsifier. Consequently, particles stabilised with WPI formed oil-in-water emulsions (O/W); particles stabilised solely with lecithin produced a highly unstable W/O emulsion; and particles stabilised with a mixture of lecithin and Tween 20 gave a stable W/O emulsion with drop size up to 30 µm. Coalescence stable, oil-continuous emulsions (W/O) with drop sizes between 5 and 15 µm were produced when the tripalmitin particles were stabilised with solely with Tween 20, solely with polyglycerol polyricinoleate, or with no emulsifier at all. It is proposed that the stability of the latter three emulsions was additionally enhanced by sintering of fat particles at the oil-water interface, providing a mechanical barrier against coalescence.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2712-2721
JournalFood & Function: linking the chemistry and physics of food with health and nutrition
Volume6
Early online date20 May 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2016

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