Title: Oil and Water Dont Mix
1Oil and Water Dont Mix
- Water is polar and oil is non-polar and so have
no affinity for each other but within either one,
the molecules have a great affinity for
themselves. This affinity causes Surface Tension
which ensures that a fluid, e.g., water, in a
container forms a surface between it and another
fluid such as oil or air.
2Coalescence of Oil Droplets (surface tension
reduction)
Water
oil
oil
oil
oil
oil
oil
3Oil and Water Separation
Water
4Emulsion
- A dispersion of one (or more) phase(s) such as
oil, water or air in another phase in which it is
normally immiscible - They are often liquid but can also be solid
(e.g., salami, pepperoni)
5Emulsion
- Emulsions consist of at least two parts
- The main phase in which the other is dispersed.
This phase is called the Continuous, Coherent,
Outer or Closed Phase. - The other phase is called the Disperse,
Discontinuous, Inner or Open Phase. - Common in food systems and include foods like
mayonnaise and margarine
6Types of Emulsions
- Water-in-oil
- margarine, low-fat spreads, butter
- Oil-in-water-
- mayonnaise, salad creams, salami, sausage
- Air and oil-in-water
- ice cream, whipped cream
7Phases of an Emulsion
Continuous phase
Water
8Droplet Size and Emulsion Property
- Normal droplets 0.01-100 mM
- Macroemulsion droplets 0.5-100 mM
- Microemulsion 0.01 - 0.5 mM
The size of the droplets depends on the method of
dispersion and time Emulsions with small
droplets have high viscosity Emulsions with
large droplets have low viscosity
9Phase Separation Prevention
Water
10Emulsifiers
- Emulsifiers have the following molecular features
Polar head, likes water
Non-polar tail, likes oil
11Types of Emulsifiers
- Cationic
- Anionic
- Amphoteric
- Non-ionic
12Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)
Water
13Emulsions (Oil in water, O/W)
- Water interacts with the polar emulsifier heads
- The oil droplets interact with the nonpolar
emulsifier tails - There is no driving force for separation of the
phases
14Hydrophile-Lipophile Balance(solubility in polar
and non-polar solvents)
HLB scale ranges from 1(most lipophilic to 20
(most hydrophilic)
- Water-in-oil emulsifiers
- HLB values of 3-6
- Humectants
- HLB values of 7-9
- Oil-in-water emulsifiers
- HLB values of 8-18
- Stabilizers of turbid systems
- HLB values of 15-18
15HLB Value Calculation
- HLB 20 (1 S/A)
- S saponification number of ester
- A acid number of acid
- Blending Emulsifiers
- A 100 (X HLBB)/HLBA - HLBB
16Common Emulsifiers
- HLB Value
- Potassium oleate 20
- Polyoxyethylene sorbitan monooleate 15
- Gelatin 9.8
- Mono and diglycerides (65 mono) 3.5
- Mono and diglycerides (50 mono) 2.8
- Oleic acid 1.0
17Emulsion Stabilizers
- Emulsions are commonly stabilized by the addition
of carbohydrate polymers - agar (ice cream)
- alginic acid (ice cream)
- guar gum (cheese foods)
- locust bean gum (salad dressing)
- xanthan gum (salad dressing)
- carboxymethyl cellulose (ice cream)