Reverse highly concentrated fluorinated emulsions exist in a large temperature domain (between 10 and 50Β°C). The study of the phase behavior reveals that the continuous medium composition varied with the temperature. Highly concentrated emulsions behave as elastic solids. Monitoring the evolution of
Rheological properties of highly concentrated protein-stabilized emulsions
β Scribed by Tatiana D. Dimitrova; Fernando Leal-Calderon
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 672 KB
- Volume
- 108-109
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0001-8686
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Γbstract
We prepared concentrated quasi monodisperse hexadecane-in-water emulsions stabilized by various proteins and investigated their rheological properties. Some protein-stabilized emulsions possess remarkably high elasticity and at the same time they are considerably fragile-they exhibit coalescence at yield strain and practically do not flow. The elastic storage modulus G9 and the loss modulus G99 of the emulsions were determined for different oil volume fractions above the random close packing. Surprisingly, the dimensionless elastic moduli G9y(sya), s being the interfacial tension, and a being the mean drop radius, obtained for emulsions stabilized by different proteins do not collapse on a single master curve. They are almost always substantially higher than the corresponding values obtained for equivalent Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate (SDS)-stabilized emulsions. The unusually high elasticity cannot be attributed to a specificity of the continuous phase, because the osmotic equation of state of our emulsions is found identical to the one obtained for samples stabilized by classical surfactants. In parallel, we mimicked the thin films that separate the droplets in the concentrated emulsion and found that the protein adsorption layers contain a substantial number of sticky surface aggregates. These severely obstruct local rearrangements of individual drops in respect to their neighbors which leads to coalescence at yield strain. Furthermore, we found that G9y(sya) is correlated (for a given oil volume fraction) to the dilatational elastic modulus, Β΄, of the protein layer adsorbed on the droplets. The intrinsic elasticity of the protein layers, together with the blocked local rearrangements are considered as the main factors determining the unusual bulk elasticity of the studied emulsions.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
OjW emulsions, stabilized by soybean globulins, are able to posses a shear strength limit as well as the capacity for thixotropic recovery. The pseudoplastic properties of the emulsions depend on the NaCl concentration. Shear strength limit and emulsion elasticity index have maximum at a salt concen
The effect of addition of hydroxyethyl cellulose (HEC) with three different molecular weights \((70,000,124,000\), and 223,000\()\) on the viscoelastic properties of polystyrene latex dispersions was investigated using steady state and oscillatory techniques. The latex contained grafted poly(ethylen