| Literature DB >> 30960126 |
Weiqiao Yang1,2, Min Zhang3, Xihong Li4, Jianan Jiang5, Ana M M Sousa6, Qiang Zhao7, Sherri Pontious8, LinShu Liu9.
Abstract
The use of polysaccharides to produce functional micro- or nanoscale fibrous mats has attracted growing interest for their food-grade applications. In this study, the characterization and electro-spinnability of guar gum (GG) solutions loaded with tannic acid (TA) was demonstrated. Food-grade antioxidant materials were successfully produced by electrospinning while incorporating different loads of TA into GG fibers. Bead-free GG-TA fibers could be fabricated from GG solution (2 wt %) with 10 wt % TA. Increasing the amount of TA led to fibers with defects and larger diameter sizes. Fourier Transformed Infrared Spectroscopy and X-ray Diffraction of neat GG and TA loaded GG fibrous mats suggested that inclusion of TA interrupted the hydrogen bonding and that a higher density of the ordered junction zones formed with the increased TA. The high TA incorporation efficiency and retained antioxidant activity of the fibrous mats afford a potential application in active edible film or drug delivery system.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; electrospinning; guar gum; nanofiber; tannic acid
Year: 2019 PMID: 30960126 PMCID: PMC6402038 DOI: 10.3390/polym11010141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Apparent viscosity of GG solutions of different concentrations as a function of shear rate.
Figure 2Plot of specific viscosity versus aqueous GG concentration.
Figure 3SEM images of electrospun fibers obtained from GG solutions with concentration of: (A) 1.1 wt %; (B) 1.3 wt %; (C) 1.5 wt %; (D) 1.7 wt %; (E) 1.9 wt %; (F) 2.0 wt %; (G) 2.1 wt %; and (H) 2.2 wt %. Magnification is 10,000×.
Figure 4SEM images and fiber diameter size (FDS) of electrospun fibers obtained from GG solutions at 2 wt % concentration loaded with: 5 wt % TA (A); 10 wt % TA (B); 15 wt % TA (C); and 20 wt % TA (D). Magnification is 10,000×.
Incorporation efficiency of GG fibrous mats loaded with TA.
| GG-TA fibrous mat | 10% TA | 15% TA | 20% TA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Actual concentration (%) | 9.98 ± 0.98 a | 15.6 ± 0.29 b | 20.01 ± 2.49 c |
| Incorporation efficiency (%) | 99.8 | 100.4 | 100.0 |
The data are expressed as mean ± standard derivation. Different letters (a–c) represent the data on the same row are significantly different (p < 0.05).
Figure 5FT-IR spectra of the: TA powder (a); neat GG (b); and of GG fibrous mats loaded with: 10% TA (c); 15% TA (d); and 20% TA (e).
Viscosity of GG and various GG-TA solutions.
| Sample | GG | GG-10% TA | GG-15% TA | GG-20% TA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viscosity (Pa· s) | 204.41 ± 23.2 a | 270.58 ± 43.5 b | 290.23 ± 45.2 c | 312.08 ± 52.6 d |
The data are expressed as mean ± standard derivation. Different letters (a–d) represent the data on the same row are significantly different (p < 0.05).
Figure 6XRD study of: the neat GG (a); and of the GG fibrous mats loaded with TA with: 10% TA (b); 15% TA (c); and 20% TA (d).
Figure 7DSC thermograms of: GG powder (a); neat GG (b); and of GG fibrous mats loaded with: 10% TA (c); 15% TA (d); and 20% TA (e).
Thermodynamic properties of the neat GG and GG fibrous mats loaded with TA.
| Sample | GG-powder | GG-fiber | 10% TA | 15% TA | 20% TA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tm (°C) | 318 | 298 | 301 | 300 | 293 |
| ΔH (J/g) | 47.76 | 82.14 | 49.68 | 37.53 | 122.10 |
Figure 8Antioxidant activity of the neat GG and of GG fibrous mats loaded with TA.