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Effect of medium molecular weight xanthan gum in rheology and stability of oil‐in‐water emulsion stabilized with legume proteins
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Citations
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References
2005
Year
Food ColloidEngineeringOil‐in‐water EmulsionGlycobiologyPolysaccharideEmulsion FormulationAbstract Xanthan GumEmulsionFood ChemistryLegume ProteinsBiochemical EngineeringRheologyXanthan GumHealth SciencesIn Vitro FermentationBiochemistryBiomolecular EngineeringBiotechnologyProtein EngineeringFood EngineeringFood Processing
Abstract Xanthan gum is a water‐soluble extracellular polysaccharide that has gained widespread commercial use because of its strong pseudoplasticity and tolerance to high ionic strength, which bring unique rheological properties to solutions. This study compares and evaluates the emulsifying properties of oil‐in‐water (30:70 v/v) emulsions stabilized with lupin and soya protein isolates and medium molecular weight xanthan gum. The protein was obtained by an isoelectric precipitation method and the polysaccharide was produced by Xanthomonas campestris ATCC 1395 in batch culture in a laboratory fermenter (LBG medium) without pH control. The addition of xanthan gum in the emulsion formulation enhances emulsion stability through the phenomenon of thermodynamic incompatibility with the legume protein, resulting in an increase of the adsorbed protein at the interface. The emulsion stability is also enhanced by a network structure built by the polysaccharide in the bulk phase. Copyright © 2005 Society of Chemical Industry
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