Abstract

While the economy is rapidly expanding in most emerging countries, issues coupled with a higher population has created foreseeable tension among food, water, and energy. It is crucial for more sustainable valorization of resources, for instance, nanocellulose, to address the core challenges in environmental sustainability. As the complexity of the system evolved, the timescale of project development has increased exponentially. However, research on the design and operation of integrated nanomaterials, along with energy supply, monitoring, and control infrastructure, has seriously lagged. The development cost of new materials can be significantly reduced by utilizing molecular simulation technology in the design of nanostructured materials. To realize its potential, nanocellulose, an amphiphilic biopolymer with the presence of rich -OH and -CH structural groups, was investigated via molecular dynamics simulation to reveal its full potential as Pickering emulsion stabilizer at the molecular level. This work has successfully quantified the Pickering stabilization mechanism profiles by nanocellulose, and the phenomenon could be visualized in three stages, namely the initial homogenous phase, rapid formation of micelles and coalescence, and lastly the thermodynamic equilibrium of the system. It was also observed that the high bead order was always coupled with a high volume of phase separation activities, through a coarse-grained model within 20,000 time steps. The outcome of this work would be helpful to provide an important perspective for the future design and development of nanocellulose-based emulsion products, which cater for food, cosmeceutical, and pharmaceutical industries.

Highlights

  • Food emulsions are common techniques employed in the food and beverages industry for more than 50 years

  • This study successfully demonstrated the phenomenon of Pickering stabilization u

  • This study successfully demonstrated the phenomenon of Pickering stabilization using NC as a particle stabilizer in the PB and water mixture

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Summary

Introduction

Food emulsions are common techniques employed in the food and beverages industry for more than 50 years. Particle-stabilized emulsions, or commonly referred to as Pickering emulsions, have recently emerged to be an alternative due to their better stability against coalescence and flocculation [2,3]. The Pickering stabilization mechanism is fundamentally different from conventional emulsions [4]. It is stabilized by the irreversible adsorption of solid particles on the oil-water interface, forming a dense layer of coating to prevent the aggregation of droplets. A Pickering emulsion could be more biocompatible if the substituting solid particles are generally regarded as safe by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) [5]

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