mixer. In a high-pressure homogenizer, the oil and water Coalescence rate constants in a high-pressure homogenizer were mixture is subjected to intense turbulent and shear flow inferred for pure emulsions of a neutrally buoyant mixture of fields. Turbulence is the predominant mechanism for emulsicar
Functional characterization of protein stabilized emulsions: Emulsifying behaviour of proteins in a valve homogenizer
β Scribed by Eva Tornberg
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1978
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 769 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5142
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Protein stabilised emulsions have been prepared in a valve homogeniser incorporated into a recirculating emulsification system, where the power input and number of passes have been varied. The food proteins studied were a soyβbean protein isolate, a whey protein concentrate (WPC) and a sodium caseinate. The emulsions obtained were characterized in terms of particle size distribution and amount of protein adsorbed on to the fat surface (protein load). Generally, the final fat surface area of the emulsions obtained increases more as a function of power input than as a function of number of passes. Distribution width, c~s~, decreases mostly with increasing power supply and number of passes, but at the highest power input c~s~ increases. The protein load on the fat globules is largely determined by the fat surface area and by the type of protein adsorbed. The soy proteins give a high protein load and the caseinates give a low protein adsorption at small fat surface areas created. This relation is reversed at large surface areas of the fat globules. The relation between percentage protein adsorbed from bulk as a function of surface area suggests that the caseinates mainly cover the newly created interface by adsorption from the bulk, whereas the soy proteins fulfil this task mostly by spreading at the interface. Salt addition to 0.2MβNaCl enhances protein adsorption at the fat globule interface in the case of soy protein and caseinate, but for the whey proteins protein load is higher in distilled water.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The interfacial properties and stability of water-in-oil emulsions containing protein were studied using micromanipulation. Micropipettes were used to produce individual water droplets in oil in a controlled manner on the micron scale. The pipettes were then used to bring two droplets into contact i
Proteins are widely used as emulsifiers in food emulsions. Model emulsions, designed to study emulsifying properties of proteins and their conformation at the interfaces often contain a hydrocarbon as apolar phase instead of natural triglycerides as found in food products. Yet, some results indicate