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Carbohydr Polym ; 345: 122537, 2024 Dec 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39227089

RÉSUMÉ

Water-permeable hollow starch particles alter the rheological behavior of their granular suspensions. However, their thin shells can rupture limiting applications. In this study, we used amaranth starch as building blocks (1 µm) to craft a crosslinked superstructure. Pickering emulsions were used as the templates where starch coated the droplets. Emulsions were heated at 75 °C to induce interpenetration of the polymers followed by precipitation in ethanol to trigger colloidal fusion. Particles were then crosslinked by sodium tri-metaphosphate; hollow particles formed after the interior template was removed by hexane. When canola oil was used, the particles ruptured at pH 11.5 due to the repulsion between the strands. In contrast, palm oil, emulsified at 50 °C, formed a rigid core after cooling, locked the starch at the surface and retained the structure. The crosslinked colloidosomes were larger (89 µm) and exhibited higher viscosity, and stronger stability. Larger particles (>100 µm) were produced using higher templating volume. Gentle centrifugation to harvest the particles kept the shells intact. The hollow structure exhibited jamming transition above 10 w/w%, which could serve as a super-thickener. This work demonstrates that microarchitecture plays a critical role in shaping material functionality.

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