Abstract

The experimental moduli ( G′ at 5 °C) reported in the preceding paper for gelatin–calcium pectinate co-gels (pH 3.9; 1.0 wt% pectin; stoichiometric Ca 2+; 0–10 wt% gelatin) formed in the presence or absence of 1 M NaCl have been analysed using a single adjustable parameter, p, to characterise partition of solvent. The analysis of samples incorporating 1 M NaCl assumed complete segregation of calcium pectinate into dispersed particles in a continuous gelatin matrix, with p defined as the ratio of water/polymer in the gelatin phase divided by the corresponding ratio for the pectin phase. Relative phase volumes at each trial value of p were used to determine the polymer concentration in each phase, and the corresponding moduli were obtained from standard calibration curves. For solvent distributions where the calculated modulus of the continuous gelatin phase was higher than that of the dispersed calcium pectinate phase, co-gel moduli were derived using the Takayanagi isostrain model, and the isostress model was used for the converse situation. The p factors required to give perfect agreement with the moduli observed experimentally were tightly grouped around a single value ( p=1.21) for all concentrations of gelatin studied, indicating that the assumption of complete segregation is reasonably valid. Calculated moduli for the gelatin phase were in good agreement with experimental values obtained by melting the gelatin network, centrifuging to sediment the dispersed calcium pectinate particles, and re-gelling the gelatin supernatant. The same p factor (1.21) was used to derive calculated moduli for co-gels formed in the absence of NaCl, where the mixed solutions remain monophasic, by application of the relationship proposed by Davies for bicontinuous composites. The modulus of the calcium pectinate gel, which is already present when the gelatin network forms, was calculated (i) on the assumption of dynamic cross-linking (i.e. using the concentration-dependence of G′ for calcium pectinate alone), and (ii) for permanent cross-linking (by application of deswelling theory). The experimental moduli moved from close agreement with the former model to close agreement with the latter as the gelatin concentration increased from 0 to 10 wt%, consistent with a progressive increase in the extent of rearrangement of the calcium pectinate network required to accommodate the compression introduced by gelation of gelatin.

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