Formation and characterization of oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by polyphenol-polysaccharide complexes: Tannic acid and β-glucan

Publication date: Available online 3 May 2019Source: Food Research InternationalAuthor(s): Ruyi Li, Shengfeng Peng, Ruojie Zhang, Taotao Dai, Guiming Fu, Yin Wan, Chengmei Liu, David Julian McClementsAbstractOil-in-water emulsions were prepared that were stabilized by a polyphenol (tannic acid, TA) and/or a polysaccharide (β-glucan, BG). The influence of TA concentration and solution pH on the physical stability and microstructure of the emulsions was investigated. Emulsions formed using only BG (1%) contained large droplets that were unstable to flocculation and coalescence. The stability of the emulsions (pH 5) could be enhanced by optimizing the ratio of TA-to-BG used to form them, i.e., TA/BG = 0.4 or 0.5. This effect was attributed to a combination of increased steric hindrance and reduced hydrogen bonding of TA to BG. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) indicated that increasing the level of TA present increased the compactness and thickness of the TA-BG interfacial layers formed around the oil droplets. Furthermore, the stability of the emulsions to droplet flocculation and coalescence depended on the TA/BG ratio and solution pH. The impact of environmental conditions on emulsion stability was also investigated. Emulsions stabilized by TA-BG complexes (TA/BG = 0.5) remained stable from pH 5 to 9 at ambient temperature and at temperatures ≤60 °C at pH 5, but were highly unstable to salt addition at pH 5. Our results may increase the breadth of a...
Source: Food Research International - Category: Food Science Source Type: research