Preliminary Program

 

All presentations will be held in Room 163C Campus Center

All equipment demonstrations will be in Room 165-169 Campus Center

Thursday November 13th 2008

 

 

Session 1: Emulsion & Ingredient Characterization

 

8:00 am. Breakfast & Pick up Registration Materials (Room 163C, Campus Center)

 

8:30 am. Introductory Remarks: Overview and purpose of the short course – Julian McClements [Presentation 1]

 

9:00 am. Droplet Characteristics: Overview of the importance of droplet concentration, size distribution, charge and interactions on emulsion stability and performance.  Description of how these parameters are defined – Jochen Weiss [Presentation 2]

 

9:45 am.  Experimental Characterization of Particle Characteristics: Optical Microscopy, Static & Dynamic Light Scattering, Electrical & Optical Pulse Counting, Ultrasonic Spectrometry, NMR, particle electrophoresis, electro-acoustics – Julian McClements [Presentation 3]

 

10:45 am. Coffee Break - Equipment Demonstration (Room 162)

 

11:15 am. Ingredient Functionality & Characterization: Discussion of the physicochemical basis of the functional performance of emulsifiers, texture modifiers & weighting agents used to formulate food emulsions – Julian McClements [Presentation 4]

 

12:00 pm. Lunch (Amherst Room, 10th floor) & Equipment Demonstration (Room 162): Demonstration of modern analytical instrumentation for the preparation and characterization of emulsion properties.

 

Session 2: Emulsion Formation & Stability

 

2:00 pm. Emulsion Formation: Discussion of the principles and methods available to prepare emulsions, and how the characteristics of emulsions can be controlled – Jochen Weiss [Presentation 5]

 

2:45 pm. Emulsion Stability (1): Overview of the major physicochemical mechanisms responsible for the breakdown of food emulsions and experimental methods of characterizing them, including creaming, flocculation, coalescence and Ostwald ripening– Julian McClements [Presentation 6]

 

3:45 pm. Coffee Break - Equipment Demonstration (Room 162)

 

4:30 pm.  Emulsion Stability (2): Overview of the major physicochemical mechanisms responsible for the breakdown of food emulsions and experimental methods of characterizing them, including creaming, flocculation, coalescence and Ostwald ripening– Julian McClements [Presentation 7]

 

6:00 pm.  Reception

7:00 pm.  Dinner

 

Friday 14th November 2008

Session 3: Emulsion Properties: Appearance, Rheology & Flavor

 

 

8:00 am. Breakfast (Room 163C, Campus Center)

 

8:30 am. Emulsion Properties: Appearance, Flavor, Rheology: Overview of major factors influencing the optical, flavor and rheological properties of food emulsions Julian McClements [Presentation 8]

 

9:15 am. Emulsion Rheology - Characterization: Principles of the major analytical techniques used to characterize emulsion rheology Jochen Weiss [Presentation 9]

 

10:00 am. Coffee Break

 

Session 4: Specialty Emulsions: Creating Improved Stability and Performance

 

 

10:30 am. Emulsion-Based Delivery Systems: Nanoemulsions, Multiple emulsions, Multilayer emulsions, Filled hydrogel particles Julian McClements [Presentation 10]

 

11:15 am. Solid Lipid Nanoparticles – – Jochen Weiss [Presentation 11]

 

11:45 pm. Colloidal based delivery systems for antimicrobials Jochen Weiss [Presentation 12]

 

12:45 pm. Emulsion based delivery systems for w-3 encapsulation and their stabilizationJulian McClements [Presentation 13]

 

1.30 pm. Lunch

2:30 pm.  Tour of the Chenoweth Laboratory

 

Presentations

 

(1) Introduction

 

(2) Droplet characteristics

 

(3) Droplet Characterization

 

(4) Ingredient Functionality

 

(5) Emulsion Formation

 

(6) Emulsion Stability

 

(7) Emulsion Stability

 

(8) Emulsion Properties

 

(9) Emulsion Rheometry

 

(10) Speciality Emulsions

 

(11) SLN Delivery Systems

 

(12) Antimicrobial Delivery Systems

 

(13) w-3 Delivery Systems