1. Preparation and Characterization of Microemulsions Based on Antarctic Krill Oil.
- Author
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Zhao J, Jiang K, Chen Y, Chen J, Zheng Y, Yu H, and Zhu J
- Subjects
- Animals, Antarctic Regions, Emulsions, Ethanol chemistry, Hexoses chemistry, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Myristates chemistry, Oils isolation & purification, Particle Size, Polysorbates chemistry, Rheology, Solubility, Time Factors, Viscosity, Water chemistry, Euphausiacea chemistry, Oils chemistry, Surface-Active Agents chemistry
- Abstract
Antarctic krill oil is high in nutritional value and has biological functions like anti-inflammation and hypolipidemic effects. But it has and unpleasant smell, and unsaturated fatty acids are prone to oxidative deterioration. Its high viscosity and low solubility in water make it difficult for processing. Microemulsion can be a new promising route for development of krill oil product. We determined a formula of krill oil-in-water microemulsion with krill oil: isopropyl myristate = 1:3 as oil phase, Tween 80:Span 80 = 8:2 as surfactant, ethanol as co-surfactant and the mass ratio of surfactant to co-surfactant of 3:1. After screening the formula, we researched several characteristics of the prepared oil-in-water microemulsion, including electrical conductivity, microstructure by transmission electron microscope and cryogenic transmission electron microscope, droplet size analysis, rheological properties, thermal behavior by differential scanning calorimeter and stability against pH, salinity, and storage time.
- Published
- 2020
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