JOURNAL ARTICLE

Complex Coacervation of Whey Proteins and Gum Arabic

Fanny WeinbreckRenko de VriesP.M.M. SchrooyenC. G. de Kruif

Year: 2003 Journal:   Biomacromolecules Vol: 4 (2)Pages: 293-303   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Mixtures of gum arabic and whey protein (whey protein isolate, WP) form an electrostatic complex in a specific pH range. Three phase boundaries (pH(c), pHphi(1), pHphi(2)) have been determined using an original titration method, newly applied to complex coacervation. It consists of monitoring the turbidity and light scattering intensity under slow acidification in situ with glucono-delta-lactone. Furthermore, the particle size could also be measured in parallel by dynamic light scattering. When the pH is lowered, whey proteins and gum arabic first form soluble complexes. This boundary is designated as pH(c). When the interaction is stronger (at lower pH), phase separation takes place (at pHphi(1)). Finally, at pHphi(2) complexation was suppressed by the charge reduction of the gum arabic. The major constituent of the whey protein preparation used was beta-lactoglobulin (beta-lg), and it was shown that beta-lg was indeed the main complex-forming protein. Moreover, an increase of the ionic strength shifted the pH boundaries to lower pH values, which was summarized in a state diagram. The experimental pH(c) values were compared to a newly developed theory for polyelectrolyte adsorption on heterogeneous surfaces. Finally, the influence of the total biopolymer concentration (0-20% w/w) was represented in a phase diagram. For concentrations below 12%, the results are consistent with the theory on complex coacervation developed by Overbeek and Voorn. However, for concentrations above 12%, phase diagrams surprisingly revealed a "metastable" region delimited by a percolation line. Overall, a strong similarity is seen between the behavior of this system and a colloidal gas-liquid phase separation.

Keywords:
Coacervate Chemistry Gum arabic Ionic strength Turbidimetry Whey protein Phase diagram Whey protein isolate Titration Chromatography Phase (matter) Biopolymer Analytical Chemistry (journal) Crystallography Inorganic chemistry Physical chemistry Organic chemistry

Metrics

595
Cited By
18.97
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
30
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Proteins in Food Systems
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Food Science
Microencapsulation and Drying Processes
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Food Science
Surfactants and Colloidal Systems
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Organic Chemistry

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Microencapsulation of flaxseed oil by soya proteins–gum arabic complex coacervation

Die DongZhengliang QiYufei HuaYeming ChenXiangzhen KongCaimeng Zhang

Journal:   International Journal of Food Science & Technology Year: 2015 Vol: 50 (8)Pages: 1785-1791
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Selective Complex Coacervation of Pea Whey Proteins with Chitosan To Purify Main 2S Albumins

Shunuan YangXingfei LiYufei HuaYeming ChenXiangzhen KongCaimeng Zhang

Journal:   Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry Year: 2020 Vol: 68 (6)Pages: 1698-1706
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Complex coacervation of proteins and anionic polysaccharides

Cornelus G. de KruifFanny WeinbreckRenko de Vries

Journal:   Current Opinion in Colloid & Interface Science Year: 2004 Vol: 9 (5)Pages: 340-349
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.