Influence of surfactant type and thermal cycling on formation and stability of flavor oil emulsions fabricated by spontaneous emulsification
2016
Saberi, Amir Hossein | Fang, Yuan | McClements, David Julian
Food-grade emulsions can be fabricated using simple and inexpensive low-energy homogenization methods. In this study, we examined the influence of surfactant type (Tween 40, 60, and 80), oil phase composition (limonene-to-medium chain triglyceride ratio), and temperature (25 to 95°C) on the formation and stability of flavor oil-in-water emulsions (10wt% oil, 15wt% surfactant, pH3) fabricated using spontaneous emulsification. Transparent emulsion-based delivery systems containing ultrafine droplets (d<40nm) could be formed at room temperature at certain limonene contents for all three surfactants. When these emulsions were heated and then cooled, appreciable droplet growth occurred at lower limonene levels (<60% limonene) leading to cloudiness, but ultrafine droplets were still present at higher limonene concentrations (80% limonene) leading to optical clarity. These results were attributed to the influence of oil phase composition and surfactant type on the phase inversion behavior of the surfactant-oil-water systems.
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