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The possibility of producing stable oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions containing oil droplets surrounded by multiple layer interfacial membranes from food grade ingredients has been demonstrated. These emulsions were produced using a three stage process that relies on the adsorption of charged biopolymers to oppositely charged surfaces. Emulsions (0.5 wt % corn oil, 0.1 wt % lecithin, 0.0078 wt % chitosan, 0.02 wt % pectin, and 100 mM acetic acid, pH 3.0) containing oil droplets stabilized by lecithin-chitosan-pectin membranes were formed using this interfacial layer-by-layer deposition process. The droplets in these emulsions had good stability to aggregation over a wide range of pH values and salt concentrations (pH 4-8 at 0 mM NaCl and pH 3-8 at 100 mM NaCl). This technology could be extremely useful to the food industry for the creation of O/W emulsions with improved properties or novel applications, e.g., improved stability to environmental stresses, protection of labile substances, controlled release, and triggered release.
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Satoshi Ogawa
Saitama University
Eric A. Decker
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
David Julian McClements
University College Dublin
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Ogawa et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a21a08be06b4fc4c1abc373 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/jf034436k
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