Impact of Ultrasound Emulsification on the Physicochemical Properties of Emulsions Stabilised by Quinoa Protein Isolates at Different pHs

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Date
2024-03
Open Access Location
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
Rights
(c) The Author/s
CC BY 4.0
Abstract
Ultrasonication (20 kHz, 19.9 W/10 mL sample) was used to form O/W emulsions stabilised by quinoa protein isolate (QPI) particles at 3 wt%. Effects of pH (3, 5, 7, 9) and oil volume fractions (20%, 40%, and 60%) on rheological properties and microstructural characteristics of emulsions were investigated. All emulsions show viscoelastic behaviours and form a network structure comprising aggregated oil droplets and QPI particles. Emulsions stabilised by QPI at pH 5 showed largest droplet sizes and lowest gel strength due to extensive aggregation of proteins around the isoelectric point (pI ~ 4.5). The gel strength (G´(1 Hz)) were enhanced when the oil volume fraction increased and reached ~ 1100–1350 Pa at 60% oil volume fraction at different pH. This could be attributed to a tighter packing of oil droplets at 60% oil. Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed that interdroplets bridging and voids filling of QPI particles between oil droplets are critical in formation of aggregated emulsions network. Emulsions stabilised by QPI at pH 7 and 9 possessed thinner interfacial layers compared to those at pH 3 and 5. Finally, this study shows a potential of using ultrasonication to prepare gel-like emulsions stabilised by QPI, broadening applications of quinoa proteins in making dairy substitutes with semi-solid textural characteristics.
Description
Keywords
Emulsion gels, High intensity ultrasound, Viscoelasticity, Microstructures, Quinoa protein isolates
Citation
Yang Z, Cheng L. (2024). Impact of Ultrasound Emulsification on the Physicochemical Properties of Emulsions Stabilised by Quinoa Protein Isolates at Different pHs. Food Biophysics. 19. 1. (pp. 160-171).
Collections