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Drying Technology
An International Journal
Volume 25, 2007 - Issue 6
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Original Articles

Encapsulation of Nanoparticles of d-Limonene by Spray Drying: Role of Emulsifiers and Emulsifying Techniques

, &
Pages 1069-1079 | Published online: 16 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

Submicron emulsion particles of d-limonene prepared by a microfluidizer and ultrasound were spray dried to produce nanoparticle encapsulated powders. Maltodextrin combined with a surface-active biopolymer (modified starch or whey protein concentrate) or a small molecule surfactant (Tween 20) was used as the wall material. Results showed that microfluidization was an efficient emulsification technique resulting in a powder with the highest retention (86.2%) of d-limonene, mainly due to its capability to produce emulsions with fairly small droplets (d 43 of 700–800 nm) and narrow distributions, which had a good stability during the process. Among different emulsifiers used, although Tween 20 significantly reduced the emulsion size (d 43 < 200 nm), the resulted powder had the poorest encapsulation efficiency.

Notes

Means within the same column followed by different letters are significantly (P < 0.05) different.

Means within the same column followed by different letters are significantly (P < 0.05) different.

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