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Production of vegetable oil in milk emulsions using membrane emulsification

Author

Summary, in English

The production of emulsions using milk as the continuous phase has a number of applications of interest from the food industry's point of view. In addition, producing an emulsion with a narrow drop size distribution is interesting since their increased stability could avoid Oswald ripening and creaming. Membrane emulsification is a novel technique which helps to obtain a narrower distribution compared to other emulsification techniques such as homogenizers or ultrasound. Moreover the use of membrane emulsification may reduce the energy cost. The food industry is interested in reducing the use of food additives, both to save money and increase consumer acceptance. Therefore the aim of this work was to investigate the use of the intrinsic emulsifying capacity of milk proteins to act as stabilizers for oil droplets produced by membrane emulsification. Using tubular SPG membrane (4.8 mu m pore diameter) in recirculation mode, at dispersed phase fluxes of either 5 L/hm(2) or 50 L/hm(2), a stable final emulsion of 30% w/w oil was obtained. The fat globule size distribution was more bimodal at higher oil concentrations and at the higher flux.

Department/s

  • Department of Food Technology, Engineering and Nutrition

Publishing year

2009

Language

English

Pages

631-638

Publication/Series

Desalination

Volume

245

Issue

1-3

Document type

Conference paper

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Food Engineering

Keywords

  • Membrane emulsification
  • Operating parameters
  • Drop size
  • Milk
  • proteins

Conference name

Engineering with Membranes 2008 Conference

Conference date

2008-05-25 - 2008-05-28

Conference place

Algarve, Portugal

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1873-4464
  • ISSN: 0011-9164