Preparation and characterization of quercetin-loaded silica microspheres stabilized by combined multiple emulsion and sol-gel processes
Author(s) -
Young Chol Kim,
Dong Joon Lee,
Eun Young Jung,
Jun Ho Bae,
Sang Uck Lee,
Hyeong Bae Pyo,
Kuk Kang,
Dong Hun Lee
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
chemical industry and chemical engineering quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2217-7434
pISSN - 1451-9372
DOI - 10.2298/ciceq131002010k
Subject(s) - tetraethyl orthosilicate , emulsion , materials science , scanning electron microscope , quercetin , chemical engineering , polyol , pickering emulsion , chromatography , particle size , nanotechnology , chemistry , polyurethane , organic chemistry , composite material , engineering , antioxidant
Despite exhibiting a wide spectrum of cosmeceutical properties, flavonoids and related compounds have some limitations related to their stability and solubility in distilledwater. In this project, we prepared silica microspheres using a novel method that uses polyol-in-oil-in-water (P/O/W) emulsion and sol-gel methods as techniques for stabilizing quercetin. A stable microsphere suspension was successfully preparedusing a mixed solvent system comprising a polyol-phase medium for performing the sol-gel processing of tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) as an inorganic precursor with outer water phase. The morphology of the microsphere was evaluated using a scanning electron microscope (SEM), which showed a characteristic spherical particle shape with a smooth surface. Furthermore, SEM/EDSanalysis of a representative microsphere demonstrated that the inner structure of the silica microspheres was filled with quercetin. The mean diameter of the microsphere was in the range 20.6-35.0 μm, and the encapsulation efficiency ranged from 17.8% to 27.5%. The free and encapsulated quercetin samples were incubated in separateaqueous solutions at 25 and 42°C for 28 days. The residualcontent of the quercetin encapsulated by silica microspheres was 82% at 42°C. In contrast, that of the free quercetin stored at 42°C decreased to ~24%
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