Panax Notoginseng polysaccharide stabilized gel-like Pickering emulsions: Stability and mechanism

In this work, the polysaccharide from Panax Notoginseng (SPNP), a traditional herb in China, was used as an outstanding Pickering stabilizer to fabricate Pickering emulsions. The SPNP was characterized to be a porous network structure with a rough surface surrounded by some nanoparticles. Rheologica...

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Published inInternational journal of biological macromolecules Vol. 249; p. 125893
Main Authors Li, Dafei, Wu, Yingni, Yin, Haoran, Feng, Wei, Ma, Xiaoshuang, Xiao, Huining, Xin, Wenfeng, Li, Chengcheng
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 30.09.2023
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Summary:In this work, the polysaccharide from Panax Notoginseng (SPNP), a traditional herb in China, was used as an outstanding Pickering stabilizer to fabricate Pickering emulsions. The SPNP was characterized to be a porous network structure with a rough surface surrounded by some nanoparticles. Rheological measurement of the obtained Pickering emulsions demonstrated the formation of emulsion gels. Moreover, the emulsions exhibited excellent storage (14 days), pH (1.0–11.0), ionic strength (0–500 mM), and temperature (4–50 °C) stabilities. In addition, the Pickering emulsions showed a freeze-thaw stability, which is beneficial in food, cosmetic or biomedical applications when they may require freezing for storage and melting before use. Confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM) and cryo-scanning electron microscopy (cryo-SEM) results showed that SPNPs effectively adsorbed at the oil–water interface by forming a compact three-dimensional (3D) network structure and multilayer anchoring on the surface of the emulsion droplets, thus inhibiting the droplet coalescence and flocculation. This study provides a kind of Pickering emulsions applicable in food, biomedical and cosmetic industries.
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ISSN:0141-8130
1879-0003
DOI:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.125893