Litcius/Paper detail

Curcumin encapsulation in Pickering emulsions co-stabilized by starch nanoparticles and chitin nanofibers

Yeong-Sheng Lee, Rodrigo Tarté, Nuria C. Acevedo

2021RSC Advances29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

-anisidine (AV) values. The results of passive release measurements indicated over 60% of curcumin was retained after 24 h. SNP/ChF-stabilized Pickering emulsions showed approximately 50% and 45% of curcumin retention upon 16 d of storage and under UV exposure, respectively. Moreover, significant improvement in the curcumin retention was found when higher concentrations of both solid nanoparticles were used. The degradation kinetics of curcumin over storage time and under UV exposure were found to follow first order kinetics. When both emulsifiers were doubled (C4S2), shelf-life was extended to longer than 60 d (AV < 10). This study provides a promising approach to protect encapsulated curcumin, which could potentially be used in functional food products with extended shelf-life.

Topics & Concepts

Pickering emulsionChitinCurcuminNanofiberNanoparticleChemical engineeringChitosanStarchChemistryMaterials scienceNanotechnologyOrganic chemistryBiochemistryEngineeringProteins in Food SystemsPickering emulsions and particle stabilizationPolysaccharides Composition and Applications
Curcumin encapsulation in Pickering emulsions co-stabilized by starch nanoparticles and chitin nanofibers | Litcius