Design of an antioxidant powder additive based on carvacrol encapsulated into a multilayer chitosan-alginate-maltodextrin emulsion
Revista : International Journal of Biological MacromoleculesVolumen : 274
Tipo de publicación : ISI Ir a publicación
Abstract
Carvacrol has demonstrated antioxidant activity; however, its high volatility and low water solubility limit its direct application in food matrices. Then, an effective encapsulation system is required to protect it. This study aimed to design and characterize a carvacrol-based additive encapsulated in a spray-dried multilayer emulsion based on chitosan/sodium alginate/maltodextrin. Spray-drying temperature of 120 degrees C and 3 %(w/w) maltodextrin content maximized both encapsulation efficiency (similar to 97 %) and loading capacity (similar to 53 %). The powder’s antioxidant properties were evaluated in two food simulant media: water (SiW) and water-ethanol (SiD). The highest antioxidant activity was observed in SiW for both ABTS(center dot+) (8.2 +/- 0.3mg(EAG)/g) and FRAP (4.1 +/- 0.2mg(EAG)/g) methods because of the reduced release of carvacrol in SiD vs. SiW, as supported by micro- and macrostructural observations by SAXS and microscopy, respectively. An increase from 143 to 157 degrees C attributable to carvacrol protection and T-g = 44.4 degrees C (> ambient) were obtained by TGA and DSC, respectively. FT-IR confirmed intermolecular interactions (e.g. -COO- and -NH3+) as well as H-bonding formation. High water solubility (81 +/- 3 %), low hygroscopicity (8.8 +/- 0.2 %(w/w), poor flowability (CI:45 +/- 4), and high cohesiveness (HR:1.8 +/- 0.1) between particles were achieved, leading to a powdered antioxidant additive with high potential for applications which required avoiding/reducing oxidation on hydrophilic and hydrophobic food products.