Effect of different oils and ultrasound emulsification conditions on the physicochemical properties of emulsions stabilized by soy protein isolate
Ultrasonics sonochemistry • 2018
Publication Information
Authors
Ahmed Taha, Tan Hu, Zhuo Zhang, Amr M Bakry, Ibrahim Khalifa, Siyi Pan, Hao Hu
Keywords
Not Available
Journal
Ultrasonics sonochemistry
Publisher
Not Available
Volume
49
Issue
Not Available
Pages
283-293
publication.type
International
Paper Link
Open Link
Supplementary Materials
Not Available
Abstract
The effects of different ultrasound emulsification conditions (20 kHz at 50–55 W cm−2, 40% amplitude for 2, 6, 12 or 18 min) on the physicochemical properties of soybean protein isolate-stabilized emulsions containing medium chain triglycerides (MCT), and long chain triglycerides (LCTs, palm, soybean and rapeseed oils) were investigated. It was found that MCT oil emulsions had the minimum droplet size (d4,3) of 0.5 ± 0.0 µm after ultrasound emulsification for 18 min. Moreover, results indicated that MCT oil emulsions had better emulsion stability (using distilled water as a water phase at neutral pH and room temperature) and higher adsorbed protein amounts at their interface than the LCTs emulsions. However, the absolute zeta (ζ)-potential values of MCT oil emulsions were the lowest among all the oil-in-water emulsions. Interestingly, the particle size of palm oil emulsion decreased after heat treatment
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