Particle Tracking Using Confocal Microscopy to Probe the Microrheology in a Phase-Separating Emulsion Containing Nonadsorbing Polysaccharide
Brownian diffusion of fluorescent microspheres (0.21, 0.5, and 0.89 μm diameter) in conjunction with confocal microscopy has been used to monitor the microrheology of phase-separated regions in a protein-stabilized oil-in-water emulsion containing various low concentrations of a nonadsorbing polysac...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Langmuir 2006-05, Vol.22 (10), p.4710-4719 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Brownian diffusion of fluorescent microspheres (0.21, 0.5, and 0.89 μm diameter) in conjunction with confocal microscopy has been used to monitor the microrheology of phase-separated regions in a protein-stabilized oil-in-water emulsion containing various low concentrations of a nonadsorbing polysaccharide, xanthan gum. The sensitivity and reliability of the technique has been demonstrated in test experiments on (i) aqueous glycerol solutions and (ii) concentrated surfactant-stabilized emulsions (30−60 vol % oil, 1−2 wt % Tween 20). From particle tracking measurements on the caseinate-stabilized emulsions (30 vol % oil, 1.4 wt % sodium caseinate, pH 7) containing xanthan (0.03−0.07 wt %), the apparent viscosity in the oil-droplet-rich regions has been estimated to be up to 103 times higher than that in the phase-separated xanthan-rich regions. This means that our previously determined shape relaxation times for xanthan-containing blobs in the same systems can be attributed to the dominant viscoelasticity of the surrounding regions of concentrated oil droplets and not to the rheology of the xanthan-rich blobs themselves. These data provide clear and unequivocal evidence for the dominant role of the interconnected depletion-flocculated network of oil droplets in the physicochemical mechanism by which hydrocolloid thickeners control the creaming instability of concentrated oil-in-water emulsions. |
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ISSN: | 0743-7463 1520-5827 |
DOI: | 10.1021/la0533258 |