ABSTRACT
Full harnessing of grape pomace (GP) agricultural waste for the preparation of antioxidant Pickering emulsions is presented herein. Bacterial cellulose (BC) and polyphenolic extract (GPPE) were both prepared from GP. Rod-like BC nanocrystals up to 1.5 µm in length and 5-30 nm in width were obtained through enzymatic hydrolysis (EH). The GPPE obtained through ultrasound-assisted hydroalcoholic solvent extraction presented excellent antioxidant properties assessed using DPPH, ABTS and TPC assays. The BCNC-GPPE complex formation improved the colloidal stability of BCNC aqueous dispersions by decreasing the Z potential value up to -35 mV and prolonged the antioxidant half-life of GPPE up to 2.5 times. The antioxidant activity of the complex was demonstrated by the decrease in conjugate diene (CD) formation in olive oil-in-water emulsions, whereas the measured emulsification ratio (ER) and droplet mean size of hexadecane-in-water emulsions confirmed the physical stability improvement in all cases. The synergistic effect between nanocellulose and GPPE resulted in promising novel emulsions with prolonged physical and oxidative stability.
ABSTRACT
Controlling the spatial distribution of catalytic sites in metallo-folded single-chain nanoparticles (SCNPs) is a first step toward the rational design of improved catalytic soft nano-objects. Here an unexplored pathway is reported for tuning the internal structure of metallo-folded SCNPs. Unlike the conventional SCNP synthesis in good solvent (protocol I), the proposed new route (protocol II) is based on the use of amphiphilic random copolymers and transfer, after SCNP formation, from selective to good (nonselective) solvent conditions. The size and morphology of the SCNPs obtained by the two protocols, and the corresponding spatial distribution of the catalytic sites, have been determined by combining results from size exclusion chromatography with triple detection, small-angle X-ray scattering and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Remarkably, the use of these protocols allows the tuning of the internal structure of the metallo-folded SCNPs, as supported by MD simulations results. While the conventional protocol I yields a homogeneous distribution of the catalytic sites in the SCNP, these are arranged into clusters in the case of protocol II.