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Transcript
Properties of Emulsions and Foams
FDSC400
Goals
• Properties of emulsions
– Type
– Size
– Volume fraction
• Destabilization of emulsions
– Creaming
– Flocculation
– Coalescence
• Foams
Emulsion
A fine dispersion of one liquid in a
second, largely immiscible liquid. In
foods the liquids are inevitably oil
and an aqueous solution.
Types of Emulsion
mm
Water
Oil
Oil-in-water emulsion
Water-in-oil emulsion
Multiple Emulsions
mm
Water
Oil
Water-in-oil-in-water emulsion
Oil-in-water-in-oil emulsion
Emulsion Size
A
•
•
•
•
< 0.5 mm
0.5-1.5 mm
1.5-3 mm
>3 mm
Number Distributions
•
•
•
•
< 0.5 mm
0.5-1.5 mm
1.5-3 mm
>3 mm
Very few large
droplets contain
most of the oil
30
Emulsion 3
Median
25
Frequency /%
(Volume in class Total volume measured)
35
Emulsion 5
20
15
Large droplets
often contribute
most to
instability
Emulsion 1
10
5
0
0.1
1
Diameter /mm
10
Note log scale
Volume Fraction
f=Total volume of the dispersed phase
 Total volume of the system
Close packing, fmax
Monodisperse
Ideal ~0.69
Random ~0.5
Polydisperse
Much greater
Viscosity
Viscosity is the force
required to achieve unit
flow rate
No slip at
the wall
Force /N
Force per unit area /Nm-2
Distance/ m
Maximum induced flow rate /ms-1
Shear rate /s-1
Emulsion Viscosity
Dispersed phase
volume fraction
Viscosity of emulsion
  0  2.5f
Continuous0.8phase viscosity
Slope=2.5
0.7
Emulsion droplets
disrupt streamlines
and require more
effort to get the
same flow rate
Viscosity
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0
0.2
0.1
0
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
Volume Fraction
0.2
0.25
Chemical Composition
Interfacial layer. Essential to
stabilizing the emulsion
Oil Phase. Limited effects on
the properties of the emulsion
Aqueous Phase. Aqueous
chemical reactions affect the
interface and hence emulsion
stability
Emulsion Destabilization
•
•
•
•
Creaming
Flocculation
Coalescence
Combined methods
Creaming
Buoyancy
(Archimedes)
Friction
(Stokes-Einstein)
 3dv
Fb 
d g
3

6
2
d g
vs 
18c
 Continuous phase viscosity
 density difference
g Acceleration due to gravity
d droplet diameter
v droplet terminal velocity
vs Stokes velocity
Flocculation and Coalescence
FLOCCULATION
COALESCENCE
Rheology of Flocculated
Emulsions
• Flocculation leads to an
increase in viscosity
• Water is trapped within
the floc and must flow
with the floc
• Effective volume fraction
increased
rg
Gelled Emulsions
Thin liquid
Viscous liquid
Gelled solid
Creaming & Slight Flocculation
• Flocs have larger
effective size
• Smaller 
• Tend to cream much
faster
Creaming & Extreme Flocculation
• Heavily flocculated
emulsions form a
network
• Solid-like properties
(gel)
• Do not cream (may
collapse after lag
period)
Foams
Concentrated
Dilute
Dilute Foams
•
•
•
•
•
Somewhat similar to emulsions
Various modes of formation
Large (~mm) spherical bubbles
Very fast creaming
Ostwald ripening
Concentrated Foams
• Distorted nonspherical gas cells
• Very high volume
fraction, often >99%
Foam Drainage
• Water drains from
foam under gravity
• As water leaves, faces
of film are brought
closer together
Film Rupture
• Film must thin then burst
• Inhibited by surfactant repulsion/interfacial
film
• Self-repair by the Gibbs-Marangoni effect