4.6 Article

Microencapsulation of Citrus aurantifolia essential oil with the optimized CaCl2 crosslinker and its antibacterial study for cosmetic textiles

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 12, Issue 47, Pages 30682-30690

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2ra04053k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Universitas Padjadjaran [2203/UN6.3.1/PT.00/2022]
  2. Indonesian Ministry of Education, Culture, Research and Technology [2064/UN6.3.1/PT.00/2022]

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A functional fabric immobilized with microcapsules of lime essential oil was prepared and characterized in this study. The immobilized microcapsules showed moderate antibacterial activity against various bacteria. This research provides new insights into the development of functional textiles with antimicrobial properties.
A functional fabric immobilized by the microcapsules of C. aurantifolia lime essential oil (LO) was prepared and characterized. A varied amount of CaCl2 crosslinker was optimized to coacervate LO using alginate-gelatin biopolymers and Tween 80 emulsifier. A further evaluation of the immobilized LO microcapsules for the antibacterial effect against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria was conducted. The optimized alginate/gelatin-based microcapsules were effectively crosslinked by 15% CaCl2 with an yield, oil content (OC), and encapsulation efficiency (EE) of 39.91 +/- 3.10%, 78.33 +/- 7.53%, and 90.27 +/- 5.84%, respectively. A spherical shape of LO microcapsules was homogeneously found with an average particle size of 1.394 mu m. A first-order kinetics mechanism for the release of LO out of the microcapsules was modeled by Avrami's kinetic equation (k = 1.60 +/- 3.68 x 10(-5) s(-1)). The LO microcapsules demonstrated good thermal stability up to 100 degrees C and maintained 51.07% OC and 43.56% EE at ambient temperature for three weeks. Using a pad dry method and citric acid binder, LO microcapsules were successfully immobilized on a cloth with a % add on 30.60 +/- 1.80%. The LO microcapsules and the immobilized one exhibited a moderate ZoI of bacterial growth for Gram-positive S. aureus and S. epidermidis as well as Gram-negative E. coli and K. pneumonia. Further washing test toward the functional fabric showed that the LO microcapsules incorporated into the fabric were resistant to five cycles of normal washing with a mass reduction of 22.01 +/- 1.69%.

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