Abstract
The use of wood-derived cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) or galactoglucomannans (GGM) for emulsion stabilization may be a way to obtain new environmentally friendly emulsifiers. Both have previously been shown to act as emulsifiers, offering physical, and in the case of GGM, oxidative stability to the emulsions. Oil-in-water emulsions were prepared using highly charged (1352 ± 5 µmol/g) CNFs prepared by TEMPO-mediated oxidation, or a coarser commercial CNF, less charged (≈ 70 µmol/g) quality (Exilva forte), and the physical emulsion stability was evaluated by use of droplet size distributions, micrographs and visual appearance. The highly charged, finely fibrillated CNFs stabilized the emulsions more effectively than the coarser, lower charged CNFs, probably due to higher electrostatic repulsions between the fibrils, and a higher surface coverage of the oil droplets due to thinner fibrils. At a constant CNF/oil ratio, the lowest CNF and oil concentration of 0.01 wt % CNFs and 5 wt % oil gave the most stable emulsion, with good stability toward coalescence, but not towards creaming. GGM (0.5 or 1.0 wt %) stabilized emulsions (5 wt % oil) showed no creaming behavior, but a clear bimodal distribution with some destabilization over the storage time of 1 month. Combinations of CNFs and GGM for stabilization of emulsions with 5 wt % oil, provided good stability towards creaming and a slower emulsion destabilization than for GGM alone. GGM could also improve the stability towards oxidation by delaying the initiation of lipid oxidation. Use of CNFs and combinations of GGM and CNFs can thus be away to obtain stable emulsions, such as mayonnaise and beverage emulsions.
Highlights
Stabilization of emulsions with wood-derived stabilizers such as variations of cellulose and hemicelluloses has been the focus of several research papers in recent years
Oil-in-water Pickering emulsions with various amounts of cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) and rapeseed oil were prepared through stabilization with two different qualities of CNFs
Micrographs and visual appearance were used to assess the physical stability of the emulsions over 1 month of storage at room temperature, while the formation of volatile secondary oxidation products was followed to study the oxidative stability
Summary
Stabilization of emulsions with wood-derived stabilizers such as variations of cellulose and hemicelluloses has been the focus of several research papers in recent years. Surfactants are widely used and effective stabilizers, but can be harmful to the environment (Arslan-Alaton and Erdinc 2006; Gomez et al 2011; Jardak et al 2016). This is an important drive to develop new more environmentally friendly emulsion stabilizers.
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