Publication | Closed Access
Interfacial Concentrations of Hydroxytyrosol and Its Lipophilic Esters in Intact Olive Oil-in-Water Emulsions: Effects of Antioxidant Hydrophobicity, Surfactant Concentration, and the Oil-to-Water Ratio on the Oxidative Stability of the Emulsions
68
Citations
35
References
2016
Year
Food ChemistryAntioxidant HydrophobicityFood ColloidBiomanufacturingLipid AnalysisBiochemistrySurfactant ConcentrationInterfacial ConcentrationsChain Length EffectsSurfactant SolutionAo Chain LengthLipid ChemistryChain LengthsEmulsionHealth Sciences
We determined the interfacial molarities of the antioxidants, AOs, hydroxytyrosol (HT), and HT fatty acid esters with chain lengths of 1 to 16 carbons in intact olive oil/water/Tween 20 emulsions. The results were compared with chain length effects on the oxidative stability of the same emulsions, and a direct correlation was established. Both (AOI) molarities (varying 50-250 times greater than the stoichiometric 3.5 × 10(-3) M AO concentration) and antioxidant efficiencies show similar parabola-like dependences on AO chain length with a maximum at C8, consistent with the "cut-off" effect often observed at longer chain lengths. Results should aid in understanding the complex structure-reactivity relationships between AO efficiencies in emulsified systems and their hydrophobilic-hydrophobic balance.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1