Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique

High internal phase emulsions (HIPEs) come with challenges regarding droplet stability given the increased level of stress exerted on the thin films separating droplets owing to small inter-droplet distances and large number of contacts. Proteins are frequently used as emulsifiers for HIPE food products, and they seem to work from a pragmatic point of view because besides offering repulsive barriers against coalescence they form a viscoelastic network that limits film drainage. However, the mechanistic understanding of how dynamic conditions influence the stability of protein stabilized emulsions is still incomplete because most studies in the literature employ classical light scattering measurement methods to assess emulsion stability which require the dilution of the samples given their turbid nature. The prior thus renders results that are not ideally suited to extrapolate the destabilization kinetics to the properties of the original droplet structure. In this study, we quantify coalescence using a ‘purposedly’ designed microfluidic chip for the formulation of high internal phase emulsions (volume fractions range 0.64–0.94). On average, >50,000 hexadecane droplets stabilized with β-lactoglobulin are evaluated in each experiment. Below protein monolayer coverage, coalescence increases with the flow velocity of the dispersed phase and the volume fraction (φd) as a result of droplet-droplet compression. We find that the formation of tightly packed droplet structure generates film stretching, and allows for increased interaction over time contributing to coalescence. Emulsion stability was improved with increasing continuous phase viscosity until hexagonal closed packing is reached (φd > 0.91) after which more coalescence occurs, since the increased compression counteracts the effects of viscous dissipation in the separating films which hinder drainage. Our observations provide new insights into the evolution of droplet interactions as a function of volume fraction, and the coalescence mechanisms responsible for the destabilization of protein-stabilized HIPEs.

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Main Authors: Williams, Yhan, Wensveen, Mara, Corstens, Meinou, Schroën, Karin
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/coalescence-kinetics-of-high-internal-phase-emulsions-observed-by
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6194062024-12-04 Williams, Yhan Wensveen, Mara Corstens, Meinou Schroën, Karin Article/Letter to editor Journal of Food Engineering 362 (2024) ISSN: 0260-8774 Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique 2024 High internal phase emulsions (HIPEs) come with challenges regarding droplet stability given the increased level of stress exerted on the thin films separating droplets owing to small inter-droplet distances and large number of contacts. Proteins are frequently used as emulsifiers for HIPE food products, and they seem to work from a pragmatic point of view because besides offering repulsive barriers against coalescence they form a viscoelastic network that limits film drainage. However, the mechanistic understanding of how dynamic conditions influence the stability of protein stabilized emulsions is still incomplete because most studies in the literature employ classical light scattering measurement methods to assess emulsion stability which require the dilution of the samples given their turbid nature. The prior thus renders results that are not ideally suited to extrapolate the destabilization kinetics to the properties of the original droplet structure. In this study, we quantify coalescence using a ‘purposedly’ designed microfluidic chip for the formulation of high internal phase emulsions (volume fractions range 0.64–0.94). On average, >50,000 hexadecane droplets stabilized with β-lactoglobulin are evaluated in each experiment. Below protein monolayer coverage, coalescence increases with the flow velocity of the dispersed phase and the volume fraction (φd) as a result of droplet-droplet compression. We find that the formation of tightly packed droplet structure generates film stretching, and allows for increased interaction over time contributing to coalescence. Emulsion stability was improved with increasing continuous phase viscosity until hexagonal closed packing is reached (φd > 0.91) after which more coalescence occurs, since the increased compression counteracts the effects of viscous dissipation in the separating films which hinder drainage. Our observations provide new insights into the evolution of droplet interactions as a function of volume fraction, and the coalescence mechanisms responsible for the destabilization of protein-stabilized HIPEs. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/coalescence-kinetics-of-high-internal-phase-emulsions-observed-by 10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2023.111739 https://edepot.wur.nl/639133 Life Science https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
Williams, Yhan
Wensveen, Mara
Corstens, Meinou
Schroën, Karin
Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique
description High internal phase emulsions (HIPEs) come with challenges regarding droplet stability given the increased level of stress exerted on the thin films separating droplets owing to small inter-droplet distances and large number of contacts. Proteins are frequently used as emulsifiers for HIPE food products, and they seem to work from a pragmatic point of view because besides offering repulsive barriers against coalescence they form a viscoelastic network that limits film drainage. However, the mechanistic understanding of how dynamic conditions influence the stability of protein stabilized emulsions is still incomplete because most studies in the literature employ classical light scattering measurement methods to assess emulsion stability which require the dilution of the samples given their turbid nature. The prior thus renders results that are not ideally suited to extrapolate the destabilization kinetics to the properties of the original droplet structure. In this study, we quantify coalescence using a ‘purposedly’ designed microfluidic chip for the formulation of high internal phase emulsions (volume fractions range 0.64–0.94). On average, >50,000 hexadecane droplets stabilized with β-lactoglobulin are evaluated in each experiment. Below protein monolayer coverage, coalescence increases with the flow velocity of the dispersed phase and the volume fraction (φd) as a result of droplet-droplet compression. We find that the formation of tightly packed droplet structure generates film stretching, and allows for increased interaction over time contributing to coalescence. Emulsion stability was improved with increasing continuous phase viscosity until hexagonal closed packing is reached (φd > 0.91) after which more coalescence occurs, since the increased compression counteracts the effects of viscous dissipation in the separating films which hinder drainage. Our observations provide new insights into the evolution of droplet interactions as a function of volume fraction, and the coalescence mechanisms responsible for the destabilization of protein-stabilized HIPEs.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Life Science
author Williams, Yhan
Wensveen, Mara
Corstens, Meinou
Schroën, Karin
author_facet Williams, Yhan
Wensveen, Mara
Corstens, Meinou
Schroën, Karin
author_sort Williams, Yhan
title Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique
title_short Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique
title_full Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique
title_fullStr Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique
title_full_unstemmed Coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique
title_sort coalescence kinetics of high internal phase emulsions observed by a microfluidic technique
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/coalescence-kinetics-of-high-internal-phase-emulsions-observed-by
work_keys_str_mv AT williamsyhan coalescencekineticsofhighinternalphaseemulsionsobservedbyamicrofluidictechnique
AT wensveenmara coalescencekineticsofhighinternalphaseemulsionsobservedbyamicrofluidictechnique
AT corstensmeinou coalescencekineticsofhighinternalphaseemulsionsobservedbyamicrofluidictechnique
AT schroenkarin coalescencekineticsofhighinternalphaseemulsionsobservedbyamicrofluidictechnique
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