Pea protein’s interfacial behavior and emulsifying capacity as affected by high-pressure homogenization treatments: an in-depth study with dilatational rheology characterization
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
D’Alessio, Giulia; Maldonado Valderrama, Julia; del Castillo-Santaella, Teresa; Sabatucci, Annalaura; Francioso, Antonio; Pittia, Paola; Di Mattia, Carla DanielaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Dilational rheology Emulsions Interfacial layer
Date
2025-11Referencia bibliográfica
D’Alessio, G., Maldonado-Valderrama, J., Castillo-Santaella, T. del, Sabatucci, A., Francioso, A., Pittia, P., & Di Mattia, C. D. (2025). Pea protein’s interfacial behavior and emulsifying capacity as affected by high-pressure homogenization treatments: an in-depth study with dilatational rheology characterization. Food Hydrocolloids, 167(111427), 111427. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodhyd.2025.111427
Patrocinador
Biocolloid and Fluid Physics Group, University of Granada (Ref: PAI-FQM115); MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 - FEDER, UE (PID2023-149387OB-I00); Consejería de Universidad, Investigación e Innovación - ERDF Andalusia Program 2021–2027 (Grant C-EXP-187-UGR23); European Union – Next Generation EU. ECS00000041Résumé
This study evaluated the effects of high-pressure homogenization (HPH) at 60 and 100 MPa (5 cycles) on the
interfacial properties and emulsifying activity of pea proteins (PP, PP60, and PP100). Pendant drop analysis
showed that HPH treatments decreased the interfacial activity of pea proteins, altering the viscoelasticity of the
adsorbed layer in a frequency-dependent manner. Structural analysis revealed that HPH promoted protein aggregation, mainly affecting legumins, which was directly linked to weaker interfacial interactions. As a result,
emulsions stabilized with treated proteins (EP60 and EP100) exhibited immediate destabilization phenomena,
such as flocculation and creaming, as confirmed by droplet size distribution, backscattering profiles, and Turbiscan® Stability Index measurements.
The HPH-processing conditions adopted in this study impaired the emulsifying performance of pea proteins.
These findings highlight the importance of selecting appropriate processing conditions to balance protein
functionality. Future research should explore alternative pressure/cycle combinations to unveil the optimized
conditions to induce beneficial structural changes while minimizing aggregation/oligomerization. Overall, this
work provides insights into how HPH affects pea protein structure, interfacial behavior, and emulsion stability,
supporting the design of more stable plant-based emulsions.





