Synergy evaluation between diverse biosurfactants toward the formulation of green oil-in-water nanoemulsions by ultrasonication method

Neela Gayathri Ganesan, Rishi Devendra Singh, Divyansh Dwivedi, Vivek Rangarajan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

The current study examines the structural compatibility of various combinations of structurally diverse biosurfactants (saponin, a biosurfactant derived from plants, and rhamnolipid and surfactin, biosurfactants derived from microorganisms) in the formulation of stable oil-in-water (O/W) nanoemulsion using the high-energy ultrasonication technique. The oil droplet size analysis revealed that mixed biosurfactants-based nanoemulsion systems at specific compositions displayed comparable stability with single-biosurfactant systems. The rhamnolipid-surfactin (R–S) system formed a stable nanoemulsion at all tested compositions, exhibiting maximal stability at 75:25 (% mol/mol) with a hydrodynamic diameter (HDD) of 168.9 nm, polydispersity index (PDI) of 0.166, and zeta potential value of −77.43 ± 2.11 mV. On the other hand, the other two combinations, rhamnolipid-saponin (R–SP) and surfactin-saponin (S-SP), showed poor kinetic stability. The S-SP exhibited stability only at 75:25 among the tested combinations with HDD, PDI, and zeta potential of 155.7 nm, 0.178, and −49.07 mV, respectively. The plant-derived saponin, whose structure is entirely different from that of microbial-derived surfactin and rhamnolipid biosurfactant, played a dominant role in determining the stability of surfactin-saponin and rhamnolipid-saponin nanoemulsion systems. Also, antimicrobial and scavenging investigations of stable nanoemulsions revealed that two-biosurfactant systems showed comparable efficacies to single biosurfactant nanoemulsions. The results of the current study strongly imply that the optimal synergy between mixed-biosurfactants at the oil-water interface leading to stable nanoemulsion is primarily dictated by the type and composition of biosurfactants used in the formulation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number136735
JournalJournal of Cleaner Production
Volume400
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 May 2023

Keywords

  • Droplet stability
  • High-energy method
  • Microbial surfactant
  • Mixed-biosurfactants
  • Nanoemulsion

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Synergy evaluation between diverse biosurfactants toward the formulation of green oil-in-water nanoemulsions by ultrasonication method'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this