%0 Generic %D 0 %T Characterization of the TiO2 E171 food additive %A Frederic Brassinne %A Jan Mast %E Sandra De Vos %E Eveline Verleysen %E Pieter-Jan De Temmerman %E Ledecq, Marina %X

E171 (Titanium dioxide) is an EC approved food additive (EC 1129/2011), authorized to be used as color in foodstuffs. It is widely used for its refractive properties (shiny coating, UV protection) in the food and pharmaceutical industries. It is intended and assumed to be present in bulk form. A nanofraction may be present.Dispersion is crucial step to characterize the particle properties of food additives as it allows to separate the primary particles. To better characterize titanium dioxide food additives (E171) their dispersion method was optimized.

A dispersion methodology based on the Guiot and Spalla approach was applied. It electrosterically stabilizes the (nano)materials, dispersed by sonication, using BSA at a pH determined by zeta potential measurement. Dispersion efficiency was examined by descriptive TEM and using a combination of TEM imaging and image analysis. The latter approach allows to assess the distribution of the particle properties (size, shape, surface structure) quantitatively. For both the pristine TiO2 food additive E171 and the JRC TiO2 representative test material zeta-potential measurement allowed to identify the conditions (pH) where a stable dispersion with a minimal level of agglomeration was observed. The stability of the dispersion was confirmed by descriptive TEM: preparing dispersions of TiO2 through a pH adjustment provides a stable dispersion of single primary particles and small aggregates and agglomerates.

Under the optimized conditions, the minimal external dimension of the primary particles could be measured more precisely and accurately by a combination of EM imaging and image analysis than in metastable conditions, such that the materials could be better classified according to the EC definition of a nanomaterial.

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