Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.

Food-grade microemulsions containing oleic acid, ethanol, Tween 20, and water were formulated as a carrier system for tea seed oil (Camellia oleifera Abel.). The effect of ethanol on the phase behavior of the microemulsion system was clearly reflected in pseudo-ternary diagrams. The solubilization c...

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Main Authors: Lingli Deng, Fei Que, Hewen Wei, Guangwei Xu, Xiaowei Dong, Hui Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4440716?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-553e8920511946dc9a13ceaa748a52152020-11-25T01:58:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01105e012729110.1371/journal.pone.0127291Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.Lingli DengFei QueHewen WeiGuangwei XuXiaowei DongHui ZhangFood-grade microemulsions containing oleic acid, ethanol, Tween 20, and water were formulated as a carrier system for tea seed oil (Camellia oleifera Abel.). The effect of ethanol on the phase behavior of the microemulsion system was clearly reflected in pseudo-ternary diagrams. The solubilization capacity and solubilization efficiency of tea seed oil dispersions were measured along the dilution line at a 70/30 surfactant/oil mass ratio with Tween 20 as the surfactant and oleic acid and ethanol (1:3, w/w) as the oil phase. The dispersed phase of the microemulsion (1.5% weight ratio of tea seed oil to the total amount of oil, surfactant, and tea seed oil) could be fully diluted with water without phase separation. Differential scanning calorimetry and viscosity measurements indicated that both the carrier and solubilized systems underwent a similar microstructure transition upon dilution. The dispersion phases gradually inverted from the water-in-oil phase (< 35% water) to the bicontinuous phase (40-45% water) and finally to the oil-in-water phase (> 45% water) along the dilution line.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4440716?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lingli Deng
Fei Que
Hewen Wei
Guangwei Xu
Xiaowei Dong
Hui Zhang
spellingShingle Lingli Deng
Fei Que
Hewen Wei
Guangwei Xu
Xiaowei Dong
Hui Zhang
Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lingli Deng
Fei Que
Hewen Wei
Guangwei Xu
Xiaowei Dong
Hui Zhang
author_sort Lingli Deng
title Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.
title_short Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.
title_full Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.
title_fullStr Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.
title_full_unstemmed Solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.
title_sort solubilization of tea seed oil in a food-grade water-dilutable microemulsion.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Food-grade microemulsions containing oleic acid, ethanol, Tween 20, and water were formulated as a carrier system for tea seed oil (Camellia oleifera Abel.). The effect of ethanol on the phase behavior of the microemulsion system was clearly reflected in pseudo-ternary diagrams. The solubilization capacity and solubilization efficiency of tea seed oil dispersions were measured along the dilution line at a 70/30 surfactant/oil mass ratio with Tween 20 as the surfactant and oleic acid and ethanol (1:3, w/w) as the oil phase. The dispersed phase of the microemulsion (1.5% weight ratio of tea seed oil to the total amount of oil, surfactant, and tea seed oil) could be fully diluted with water without phase separation. Differential scanning calorimetry and viscosity measurements indicated that both the carrier and solubilized systems underwent a similar microstructure transition upon dilution. The dispersion phases gradually inverted from the water-in-oil phase (< 35% water) to the bicontinuous phase (40-45% water) and finally to the oil-in-water phase (> 45% water) along the dilution line.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4440716?pdf=render
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AT guangweixu solubilizationofteaseedoilinafoodgradewaterdilutablemicroemulsion
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