Impact of Oil Type on Nanoemulsion Formation and Ostwald Ripening Stability

被引:586
作者
Wooster, Tim J. [1 ]
Golding, Matt [1 ]
Sanguansri, Peerasak [1 ]
机构
[1] Food Sci Australia CSIRO, Werribee, Vic 3030, Australia
关键词
D O I
10.1021/la801685v
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The formation of stable transparent nanoemulsions poses two challenges: the ability to initially create an emulsion where the entire droplet size distribution is below 80 nm, and the subsequent stabilization of this emulsion against Ostwald ripening. The physical properties of the oil phase and the nature of the surfactant layer were found to have a considerable impact on nanoemulsion formation and stabilization. Nanoemulsions made with high viscosity oils, such as long chain triglycerides (LCT), were considerably larger (D = 120 nm) than nanoemulsions prepared with low viscosity oils such as hexadecane (D = 80 nm). The optimization of surfactant architecture, and differential viscosity eta(D)/eta(C), has led to the formation of remarkably small nanoemulsions. With average sizes below 40 nm they are some of the smallest homogenized emulsions ever reported. What is more remarkable is that LCT nanoemulsions do not undergo Ostwald ripening and are physically stable for over 3 months. Ostwald ripening is prevented by the large molar volume of long chain triglyceride oils, which makes them insoluble in water thus providing a kinetic barrier to Ostwald ripening. Examination of the Ostwald ripening of mixed oil nanoemulsions found that the entropy gain associated with oil demixing provided a thermodynamic barrier to Ostwald ripening. Not only are the nanoemulsions created in this work some of the smallest reported, but they are also thermodynamically stable to Ostwald ripening when at least 50% of the oil phase is an insoluble triglyceride.
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页码:12758 / 12765
页数:8
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