We present combined experimental and modelling evidence that β-lactoglobulin proteins employed as stabilizers of oil/water emulsions undergo minor but significant conformational changes during premix membrane emulsification processes. Circular Dichroism spectroscopy and Molecular Dynamics simulations reveal that the native protein structure is preserved as a metastable state after adsorption at stress-free oil/water interfaces. However, the shear stress applied to the oil droplets during their fragmentation in narrow membrane pores causes a transition into a more stable, partially unfolded interfacial state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSystematic analysis of the extrusion process in 3D bioprinting is mandatory for process optimization concerning production speed, shape fidelity of the 3D construct and cell viability. In this study, we applied numerical and analytical modeling to describe the fluid flow inside the printing head based on a Herschel-Bulkley model. The presented analytical calculation method nicely reproduces the results of Computational Fluid Dynamics simulation concerning pressure drop over the printing head and maximal shear parameters at the outlet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmphiphilic properties enable proteins like β-lactoglobulin to stabilize oil/water-interfaces and provide stability in food-related emulsions. During emulsification, the protein undergoes three stages: (I) migration through bulk phase, (II) adsorption, and (III) interfacial rearrangement at the oil/water-interface - the kinetics of which require further research. Therefore, the aim of our study was the analytical and computational investigation of stage (I) and (II) as a function of the interfacial preoccupation, conformational state and charge of β-lactoglobulin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotocatalytic fuel cells (PFCs) are constructed from anodized photoanodes with the aim of effectively converting organic materials into solar electricity. The syntheses of the photoanodes (TiO2 , WO3 , and Nb2 O5 ) were optimized using the statistical 2(k) factorial design. A systematic study was carried out to catalog the influence of eleven types of organic substrate on the photocurrent responses of the photoanodes, showing dependence on the adsorption of the organic substrates and on the associated photocatalytic degradation mechanisms.
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