Angeliki P. Chondrou, Sotiris P. Evgenidis, Konstantinos A. Zacharias, Margaritis Kostoglou, Thodoris D. Karapantsios
{"title":"微重力条件下乳剂动态特性及稳定性评价实验装置的研制","authors":"Angeliki P. Chondrou, Sotiris P. Evgenidis, Konstantinos A. Zacharias, Margaritis Kostoglou, Thodoris D. Karapantsios","doi":"10.1007/s12217-023-10055-y","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Emulsions are encountered in foods, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals. Their stability depends strongly on gravity (creaming or sedimentation) and interface driven destabilization mechanisms (coalescence or aggregation) occurring after their production. Although of great significance, coalescence and aggregation cannot be studied in-depth on ground due to coupling with gravity driven mechanisms. To overcome this restriction, the design, development and preliminary testing of a new experimental device to be used in the forthcoming ESA parabolic flights for the evaluation of emulsion dynamic behavior and stability under low gravity conditions, is presented. Such conditions allow to get rid of creaming and sedimentation and, thus, to isolate droplets coalescence and aggregation. A novel miniature emulsification cell, along with advanced electrical and optical diagnostics to produce and investigate emulsions are incorporated to custom experimental cells. Optical diagnostics include a high speed camera (up to 750.000 fps) to monitor droplets breakup and droplet-droplet interactions and a high resolution DSLR camera (20MP) to determine droplet size distribution. The EU patented I-VED electrical impedance spectroscopy technique (<i>EP 3 005 942 A1, 2016</i>) is employed to monitor the evolution of oil volumetric fraction as a function of time and gravity. Experimental parameters under study include: oil volume fraction, surfactant concentration, pulsation duration and stroke frequency for emulsification. The implementation of the experimental device, including two racks and one baseplate, complies with ESA technical requirements and safety regulations, while a number of experiments on-ground with a conventional oil-in-water emulsion validates it from a technical and functional point of view.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":707,"journal":{"name":"Microgravity Science and Technology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Development of an Experimental Device for the Assessment of Emulsions Dynamic Behavior and Stability in Micro-gravity\",\"authors\":\"Angeliki P. Chondrou, Sotiris P. Evgenidis, Konstantinos A. Zacharias, Margaritis Kostoglou, Thodoris D. Karapantsios\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/s12217-023-10055-y\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>Emulsions are encountered in foods, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals. Their stability depends strongly on gravity (creaming or sedimentation) and interface driven destabilization mechanisms (coalescence or aggregation) occurring after their production. Although of great significance, coalescence and aggregation cannot be studied in-depth on ground due to coupling with gravity driven mechanisms. To overcome this restriction, the design, development and preliminary testing of a new experimental device to be used in the forthcoming ESA parabolic flights for the evaluation of emulsion dynamic behavior and stability under low gravity conditions, is presented. Such conditions allow to get rid of creaming and sedimentation and, thus, to isolate droplets coalescence and aggregation. A novel miniature emulsification cell, along with advanced electrical and optical diagnostics to produce and investigate emulsions are incorporated to custom experimental cells. Optical diagnostics include a high speed camera (up to 750.000 fps) to monitor droplets breakup and droplet-droplet interactions and a high resolution DSLR camera (20MP) to determine droplet size distribution. The EU patented I-VED electrical impedance spectroscopy technique (<i>EP 3 005 942 A1, 2016</i>) is employed to monitor the evolution of oil volumetric fraction as a function of time and gravity. Experimental parameters under study include: oil volume fraction, surfactant concentration, pulsation duration and stroke frequency for emulsification. 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Development of an Experimental Device for the Assessment of Emulsions Dynamic Behavior and Stability in Micro-gravity
Emulsions are encountered in foods, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals. Their stability depends strongly on gravity (creaming or sedimentation) and interface driven destabilization mechanisms (coalescence or aggregation) occurring after their production. Although of great significance, coalescence and aggregation cannot be studied in-depth on ground due to coupling with gravity driven mechanisms. To overcome this restriction, the design, development and preliminary testing of a new experimental device to be used in the forthcoming ESA parabolic flights for the evaluation of emulsion dynamic behavior and stability under low gravity conditions, is presented. Such conditions allow to get rid of creaming and sedimentation and, thus, to isolate droplets coalescence and aggregation. A novel miniature emulsification cell, along with advanced electrical and optical diagnostics to produce and investigate emulsions are incorporated to custom experimental cells. Optical diagnostics include a high speed camera (up to 750.000 fps) to monitor droplets breakup and droplet-droplet interactions and a high resolution DSLR camera (20MP) to determine droplet size distribution. The EU patented I-VED electrical impedance spectroscopy technique (EP 3 005 942 A1, 2016) is employed to monitor the evolution of oil volumetric fraction as a function of time and gravity. Experimental parameters under study include: oil volume fraction, surfactant concentration, pulsation duration and stroke frequency for emulsification. The implementation of the experimental device, including two racks and one baseplate, complies with ESA technical requirements and safety regulations, while a number of experiments on-ground with a conventional oil-in-water emulsion validates it from a technical and functional point of view.
期刊介绍:
Microgravity Science and Technology – An International Journal for Microgravity and Space Exploration Related Research is a is a peer-reviewed scientific journal concerned with all topics, experimental as well as theoretical, related to research carried out under conditions of altered gravity.
Microgravity Science and Technology publishes papers dealing with studies performed on and prepared for platforms that provide real microgravity conditions (such as drop towers, parabolic flights, sounding rockets, reentry capsules and orbiting platforms), and on ground-based facilities aiming to simulate microgravity conditions on earth (such as levitrons, clinostats, random positioning machines, bed rest facilities, and micro-scale or neutral buoyancy facilities) or providing artificial gravity conditions (such as centrifuges).
Data from preparatory tests, hardware and instrumentation developments, lessons learnt as well as theoretical gravity-related considerations are welcome. Included science disciplines with gravity-related topics are:
− materials science
− fluid mechanics
− process engineering
− physics
− chemistry
− heat and mass transfer
− gravitational biology
− radiation biology
− exobiology and astrobiology
− human physiology