4.7 Article

Physical and Chemical Stability of Curcumin in Aqueous Solutions and Emulsions: Impact of pH, Temperature, and Molecular Environment

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 65, Issue 8, Pages 1525-1532

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b04815

Keywords

curcumin; stability; delivery; emulsion; crystallization

Funding

  1. Social Justice and Special Assistance Department, Government of Maharashtra (India)
  2. USDA, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station [MAS00491]
  3. USDA, NRI Grant [2013-03795]
  4. Cooperative State Research, Extension, Education Service

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The utilization of curcumin as a nutraceutical in food and supplement products is often limited because of its low water solubility, poor chemical stability, and low oral bioavailability. This study examined the impact of pH, storage temperature, and molecular environment on the physical and chemical stability of pure curcumin in aqueous solutions and in oil -in -water emulsions. Unlike naturally occurring curcuminoid mixtures (that contain curcumin, demethoxy-curcumin, and bisdemethoxycurcumin), pure curcumin was highly unstable to chemical degradation in alkaline aqueous solutions (pH >= 7.0) and tended to crystallize out of aqueous acidic solutions (pH <7). These effects were attributed to changes in the molecular structure of curcumin under different pH conditions. The curcumin crystals formed were relatively large (10-50 /,cm), which made them prone to rapid sedimentation. The incorporation of curcumin into oil -in -water emulsions (30% MCT, 1 mg curcumin/g MCT, d(32) approximate to 298 nm) improved its water dispersibility and chemical stability. After incubation at 37 degrees C for 1 month, >85% of curcumin was retained by emulsions stored under acidic conditions (pH <7), whereas 62, 60, and 53% was retained by emulsions stored at pH 7.0, 7.4, and 8.0, respectively. There was little change in the color of curcumin-loaded emulsions when stored under acidic conditions, but their yellow color faded when stored under alkaline conditions. There was no evidence of droplet aggregation or creaming in emulsions stored for 31 days at ambient temperature. These results suggest that emulsion -based delivery systems may be suitable for improving the water dispersibility and chemical stability of curcumin, which would facilitate its application in foods and supplements.

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