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Wetting of fat crystals by triglyceride oil and water. 1. The effect of additives
Author(s) -
Johansson Dorota,
Bergenståhl Björn,
Lundgren Eva
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
journal of the american oil chemists' society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.512
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1558-9331
pISSN - 0003-021X
DOI - 10.1007/bf02542070
Subject(s) - contact angle , wetting , monoglyceride , chemistry , chemical engineering , phase (matter) , solubility , oil droplet , materials science , organic chemistry , emulsion , composite material , fatty acid , engineering
Wetting of fat crystals has been extensively examined in this work by contact angle (θ) measurements of fat crystal, oil, and water in three‐phase contact. Contact angle was measured in oil. The crystals were nonpolar and wetted by oil for a contact angle equal to 0°, and polar and wetted by water for an angle equal to 180°. Fat crystals are expected to contribute to the stability of margarine emulsions if they are preferentially wetted by the oil phase (0°<θ<90°), but result in instability if they are preferentially wetted by the water phase (90°<θ<180°). In the absence of oil and water additives, fat crystals in α and β' polymorphs were introduced to the oil/water interface from the oil side (contact angle θ ∼ 30°). β Polymorphs were completely wetted by oil (θ ≈ 0°). The contact angle for β' crystals decreased with increasing temperature and was slightly lower in butter oil than in soybean oil. Emulsifiers in the oil phase (lecithins, monoglycerides and their esters, ethoxylated emulsifiers) and surface‐active proteins in the water phase (milk proteins) made the crystals more polar (higher θ). Nonsurface‐active proteins, sugar, and citric acid had no significant effect, although concentrations of salt lowered θ. Contact angle increased with temperature for emulsifiers of limited solubility in the oil, e.g., saturated monoglyceride.

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