Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2078642 | Cerevisia | 2014 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Food industries are interested in finding highly stable foaming agents for product texture improvements. Hydrophobins have been mentioned many times in that context. For the production and purification of hydrophobin HFBII from Trichoderma reesei we found that foam fractionation of the fungal fermentation media is an interesting first step. After this step, the biophysical properties of the obtained foamate were studied. The foam generated by CO2 as the only sparging gas into a HFBII enriched solution in a closed environment was more stable than the foam generated by sparging with air. The equilibrium surface tension of a foamate containing 100Â mg/L HFBII was measured by CAMTEL CDCA-100 tensiometry as equal to 40Â mJ/m2, and was confirmed by the maximum bubble pressure tensiometer. Besides, it was found that for a long term foam preservation, the foam created by the HFBII-SDS combination is more stable than that of SDS.
Keywords
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Food Science
Authors
Mohammadreza Khalesi, Nathalie Mandelings, Zahra Shokribousjein, David Riveros-Galan, Hubert Verachtert, Kurt Gebruers, Frank Delvigne, Ivo Vankelecom, Guy Derdelinckx,