4.7 Article

Synergistic effect of whey proteins and their derived microgels in the stabilization of O/W emulsions

Journal

FOOD HYDROCOLLOIDS
Volume 135, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodhyd.2022.108229

Keywords

WPI microgels; Tannic acid; Surface-active molecules; Particle-stabilized emulsions; Mixed systems; Bridging flocculation

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Tannic acid-crosslinked whey protein isolate (TA-WPI) microgels can physically stabilize food emulsions by adsorption to the oil-water interface. The presence of residual un-reacted WPI in the microgels may contribute to the stabilization of emulsions. The physical characteristics of emulsions stabilized by a mixture of microgels and native WPI depend on the homogenization method used, with low-shear methods suppressing coalescence and high-shear methods resulting in highly flocculated emulsions.
Tannic acid-crosslinked whey protein isolate (TA-WPI) microgels can physically stabilize food emulsions by adsorption to the oil-water interface. Production of these particles is often accompanied by residual un-reacted WPI, which may play a role in the stabilization of emulsions. Here, TA-WPI microgels were produced and the presence and composition of surface-active molecules was characterized using ultrafiltration. Full purification was not feasible; the final dispersion used for emulsification had microgels and free protein in a similar to 20:1 mass ratio, both of them enriched in beta-lactoglobulin compared to the starting material. The physical characteristics of emulsions stabilized by blends of microgels and native WPI depended on the homogenization method used. When using low-shear methods (rotor-stator), microgels suppressed coalescence by bridging flocculation, which was disrupted by WPI over 14 days of storage. On the other hand, emulsions produced under high shear (microfluidizer) were very viscous, and highly flocculated, and they remained in the flocculated form after 14 days of incubation, which may be due to strong anchoring of adsorbed microgels caused by the high energy provided to the system during the homogenization procedure.

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