| Literature DB >> 28764048 |
Maja Primozic1, Akaysha Duchek1, Michael Nickerson1, Supratim Ghosh2.
Abstract
The formation, stability and rheology of 5wt% oil-in-water nanoemulsions as a function of lentil protein isolate concentration (0.5-5wt%) at pH 3.0 was investigated for 28days. All nanoemulsions, except 1wt% protein, showed bimodal droplet size distribution where the larger diameter peak was ascribed to protein aggregates and entrapped oil droplets. The average droplet size for all nanoemulsions measured from the lower diameter peak ranged from 161 to 357nm, which did not change over 28days. Stable flowable nanoemulsions were formed at 1-2wt% protein concentrations. Nanoemulsions with 3 and 5wt% protein formed strong non-flowable gels which showed a two-step yielding behavior during strain-sweep rheology, indicating gel formation by interconnected clusters of proteins and oil droplets. This study demonstrated that lentil protein has a potential to be utilized as an emulsifier in nanoemulsions, as well as in the formation of emulsion gels at higher protein concentrations.Entities:
Keywords: Accelerated stability test; Confocal microscopy; Emulsion gels; Lentil protein isolate; Nanoemulsions; Protein aggregates; Rheology
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28764048 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2017.05.079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514