Literature DB >> 23697446

Cooling rate effects on the microstructure, solid content, and rheological properties of organogels of amides derived from stearic and (R)-12-hydroxystearic acid in vegetable oil.

Jorge F Toro-Vazquez1, Juan Morales-Rueda, Adriana Torres-Martínez, Miriam A Charó-Alonso, V Ajay Mallia, Richard G Weiss.   

Abstract

Using safflower oil as the liquid phase, we investigated the organogelation properties of stearic acid (SA), (R)-12-hydroxystearic acid (HSA), and different primary and secondary amides synthesized from SA and HSA. The objective was to establish the relationship between the gelator's molecular structure, solid content, and gels' microstructure that determines the rheological properties of organogels developed at two cooling rates, 1 and 20 °C/min. The results showed that the presence of a 12-OH group in the gelator molecule makes its crystallization kinetics cooling rate dependent and modifies its crystallization behavior. Thus, SA crystallizes as large platelets, while HSA crystallizes as fibers forming gels with higher solid content, particularly at 20 °C/min. The addition to HSA of a primary or a secondary amide bonded with an alkyl group resulted in gelator molecules that crystallized as fibrillar spherulites at both cooling rates. Independent of the cooling rate, gels of HSA and its amide derivatives showed thixotropic behavior. The rheological properties of the amide's organogels depend on a balance between hydrogen-bonding sites and the alkyl chain length bonded to the amide group. However, it might also be associated with the effect that the gelators' molecular weight has on crystal growth and its consequence on fiber interpenetration among vicinal spherulites. These results were compared with those obtained with candelilla wax (CW), a well-known edible gelling additive used by the food industry. CW organogels had higher elasticity than HSA gels but lower than the gels formed by amides. Additionally, CW gels showed similar or even higher thixotropic behavior than HSA and the amide's gels. These remarkable rheological properties resulted from the microstructural organization of CW organogels. We concluded that microstructure has a more important role determining the organogels' rheology than the solid content. The fitting models developed to describe the organogels rheological behavior support this argument.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 23697446     DOI: 10.1021/la400809a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  4 in total

1.  Influence of Commercial Saturated Monoglyceride, Mono-/Diglycerides Mixtures, Vegetable Oil, Stirring Speed, and Temperature on the Physical Properties of Organogels.

Authors:  Omar Gerardo Rocha-Amador; Jose Alberto Gallegos-Infante; Qingrong Huang; Nuria Elizabeth Rocha-Guzman; Martha Rocio Moreno-Jimenez; Ruben F Gonzalez-Laredo
Journal:  Int J Food Sci       Date:  2014-09-21

2.  X-Ray Crystal Structures and Organogelator Properties of (R)-9-Hydroxystearic Acid.

Authors:  Fioretta Asaro; Carla Boga; Nicola Demitri; Rita De Zorzi; Sara Drioli; Lara Gigli; Gabriele Micheletti; Patrizia Nitti; Ennio Zangrando
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2019-08-06       Impact factor: 4.411

3.  Preparation, Characterization and Evaluation of Organogel-Based Lipstick Formulations: Application in Cosmetics.

Authors:  Cloé L Esposito; Plamen Kirilov
Journal:  Gels       Date:  2021-07-19

4.  Influence of the Mixtures of Vegetable Oil and Vitamin E over the Microstructure and Rheology of Organogels.

Authors:  Renata Miliani Martinez; Pedro Leonidas Oseliero Filho; Barbara Bianca Gerbelli; Wagner Vidal Magalhães; Maria Valéria Robles Velasco; Suzana Caetano da Silva Lannes; Cristiano Luis Pinto de Oliveira; Catarina Rosado; André Rolim Baby
Journal:  Gels       Date:  2022-01-05
  4 in total

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