Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch Nanoparticles

Emulsions stabilized by solid nanoparticles, referred to as Pickering emulsions, are becoming increasingly important in applications as they are free of surfactants. However, the bulk properties and stability of Pickering emulsions are far from being well understood. In this work, the rheological be...

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Main Authors: Upinder Bains, Rajinder Pal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:ChemEngineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2305-7084/4/4/57
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spelling doaj-d7d9bf8ecb5d49eba2eda256b4b064512020-11-25T03:51:57ZengMDPI AGChemEngineering2305-70842020-10-014575710.3390/chemengineering4040057Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch NanoparticlesUpinder Bains0Rajinder Pal1Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, CanadaDepartment of Chemical Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, CanadaEmulsions stabilized by solid nanoparticles, referred to as Pickering emulsions, are becoming increasingly important in applications as they are free of surfactants. However, the bulk properties and stability of Pickering emulsions are far from being well understood. In this work, the rheological behavior and catastrophic phase inversion of emulsions in the presence of starch nanoparticles were studied using in-situ measurements of viscosity and electrical conductivity. The aqueous phase consisting of starch nanoparticles was added sequentially in increments of 5% vol. to the oil phase under agitation condition to prepare the emulsions. The emulsions were water-in-oil (W/O) type at low to moderate concentrations of aqueous phase. At a certain critical volume fraction of aqueous phase, catastrophic phase inversion of W/O emulsion to oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion took place accompanied a sharp jump in the electrical conductivity and a sharp drop in the emulsion viscosity. The W/O emulsions were nearly Newtonian at low concentrations of aqueous phase. At high concentrations of aqueous phase, prior to phase inversion, the W/O emulsions exhibited a shear-thickening behavior. The O/W emulsions produced after phase inversion were shear-thinning in nature. The comparison of the experimental viscosity data with the predictions of emulsion viscosity model revealed only partial coverage of droplet surfaces with nanoparticles. With the increase in the concentration of starch nanoparticles (SNPs) in the aqueous phase of the emulsions, the phase inversion of W/O emulsion to O/W emulsion was delayed to higher volume fraction of aqueous phase. Thus SNPs imparted some stability to W/O emulsions against coalescence and phase inversion.https://www.mdpi.com/2305-7084/4/4/57emulsionnanoparticlesstarchPickeringrheologyviscosity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Upinder Bains
Rajinder Pal
spellingShingle Upinder Bains
Rajinder Pal
Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch Nanoparticles
ChemEngineering
emulsion
nanoparticles
starch
Pickering
rheology
viscosity
author_facet Upinder Bains
Rajinder Pal
author_sort Upinder Bains
title Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch Nanoparticles
title_short Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch Nanoparticles
title_full Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch Nanoparticles
title_fullStr Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch Nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Rheology and Catastrophic Phase Inversion of Emulsions in the Presence of Starch Nanoparticles
title_sort rheology and catastrophic phase inversion of emulsions in the presence of starch nanoparticles
publisher MDPI AG
series ChemEngineering
issn 2305-7084
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Emulsions stabilized by solid nanoparticles, referred to as Pickering emulsions, are becoming increasingly important in applications as they are free of surfactants. However, the bulk properties and stability of Pickering emulsions are far from being well understood. In this work, the rheological behavior and catastrophic phase inversion of emulsions in the presence of starch nanoparticles were studied using in-situ measurements of viscosity and electrical conductivity. The aqueous phase consisting of starch nanoparticles was added sequentially in increments of 5% vol. to the oil phase under agitation condition to prepare the emulsions. The emulsions were water-in-oil (W/O) type at low to moderate concentrations of aqueous phase. At a certain critical volume fraction of aqueous phase, catastrophic phase inversion of W/O emulsion to oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion took place accompanied a sharp jump in the electrical conductivity and a sharp drop in the emulsion viscosity. The W/O emulsions were nearly Newtonian at low concentrations of aqueous phase. At high concentrations of aqueous phase, prior to phase inversion, the W/O emulsions exhibited a shear-thickening behavior. The O/W emulsions produced after phase inversion were shear-thinning in nature. The comparison of the experimental viscosity data with the predictions of emulsion viscosity model revealed only partial coverage of droplet surfaces with nanoparticles. With the increase in the concentration of starch nanoparticles (SNPs) in the aqueous phase of the emulsions, the phase inversion of W/O emulsion to O/W emulsion was delayed to higher volume fraction of aqueous phase. Thus SNPs imparted some stability to W/O emulsions against coalescence and phase inversion.
topic emulsion
nanoparticles
starch
Pickering
rheology
viscosity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2305-7084/4/4/57
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