Physiochemical characteristics, morphology, and lubricating properties of size-specific whey protein particles by acid or ion aggregation

To investigate the influence of particle characteristics on their lubricating capacity, microparticles of controlled size (~300, ~700, and ~1900 nm) were prepared from whey proteins using two different approaches: reducing the pH and increasing the calcium ion concentration. The physiochemical, morp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of biological macromolecules Vol. 252; p. 126346
Main Authors Sun, Mengya, Ma, Peipei, Chen, Cunshe, Pang, Zhihua, Huang, Yating, Liu, Xinqi, Wang, Pengjie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.12.2023
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Summary:To investigate the influence of particle characteristics on their lubricating capacity, microparticles of controlled size (~300, ~700, and ~1900 nm) were prepared from whey proteins using two different approaches: reducing the pH and increasing the calcium ion concentration. The physiochemical, morphological, and tribological properties of the two types of particles were determined. Both treatments pronouncedly decreased the absolute value of zeta-potential and surface hydrophobicity of whey proteins, with calcium ions showing a more severe effect on zeta-potential. The viscosity of the particle suspensions increased with particle size, and ion-induced samples showed higher viscosity than acid-induced ones. Morphology investigation revealed that particle aggregation and irregularity increased with particle size increase. Distinct lubricating behaviors were observed for the two particle types within different size ranges. Viscosity played a more important role in lubrication when the particle size was small, while particle characteristics became more dominant for large particles.
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ISSN:0141-8130
1879-0003
DOI:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.126346