Title of article :
Physical and chemical stability of β-carotene-enriched nanoemulsions: Influence of pH, ionic strength, temperature, and emulsifier type
Author/Authors :
Qian، نويسنده , , Cheng and Decker، نويسنده , , Eric Andrew and Xiao، نويسنده , , Hang and McClements، نويسنده , , David Julian، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
The enrichment of foods and beverages with carotenoids may reduce the incidences of certain chronic diseases. However, the use of carotenoids in foods is currently limited because of their poor water-solubility, high melting point, low bioavailability, and chemical instability. The potential of utilising oil-in-water (O/W) nanoemulsions stabilised by a globular protein (β-lactoglobulin) for encapsulating and protecting β-carotene was examined. The influence of temperature, pH, ionic strength, and emulsifier type on the physical and chemical stability of β-carotene enriched nanoemulsions was investigated. The rate of colour fading due to β-carotene degradation increased with increasing storage temperature (5–55 °C), was faster at pH 3 than pH 4–8, and was largely independent of ionic strength (0–500 mM of NaCl). β-Lactoglobulin-coated lipid droplets were unstable to aggregation at pH values close to the isoelectric point of the protein (pH 4 and 5), at high ionic strengths (NaCl >200 mM, pH 7), and at elevated storage temperatures (55 °C). β-Carotene degradation was considerably slower in β-lactoglobulin-stabilised nanoemulsions than in Tween 20-stabilised ones. These results provide useful information for facilitating the design of delivery systems to encapsulate and stabilise β-carotene for application within food, beverage, and pharmaceutical products.
Keywords :
stability , Functional foods , nutraceuticals , Nanoemulsion , ?-lactoglobulin , Protein , ?-Carotene , carotenoids , Degradation
Journal title :
Food Chemistry
Journal title :
Food Chemistry