4.6 Article

Keratin-Chitosan Microcapsules via Membrane Emulsification and Interfacial Complexation

Journal

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
Volume 9, Issue 49, Pages 16617-16626

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c05304

Keywords

microencapsulation; membrane emulsification; keratin; chitosan; biopolymer; coacervation; layer-by-layer; polyelectrolyte complex

Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/P027490/1]

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This study reports the continuous fabrication of stable microcapsules using renewable, biodegradable biopolymer wall materials keratin and chitosan via membrane emulsification for the first time. The microcapsules, with a core-shell structure formed through interfacial complexation of keratin and chitosan, showed enhanced stability and release efficiency, potentially for applications in skin pH formulas for oil protection.
The continuous fabrication via membrane emulsification of stable microcapsules using renewable, biodegradable biopolymer wall materials keratin and chitosan is reported here for the first time. Microcapsule formation was based on opposite charge interactions between keratin and chitosan, which formed polyelectrolyte complexes when solutions were mixed at pH 5.5. Interfacial complexation was induced by transfer of keratin-stabilized primary emulsion droplets to chitosan solution, where the deposition of chitosan around droplets formed a core-shell structure. Capsule formation was demonstrated both in batch and continuous systems, with the latter showing a productivity up to 4.5 million capsules per minute. Keratin-chitosan microcapsules (in the 30-120 mu m range) released less encapsulated nile red than the keratin-only emulsion, whereas microcapsules cross-linked with glutaraldehyde were stable for at least 6 months, and a greater amount of cross-linker was associated with enhanced dye release under the application of force due to increased shell brittleness. In light of recent bans involving microplastics in cosmetics, applications may be found in skin-pH formulas for the protection of oils or oil-soluble compounds, with a possible mechanical rupture release mechanism (e.g., rubbing on skin).

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