P. Fairley et al., MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES AND WATER-VAPOR PERMEABILITY OF EDIBLE FILMS FROM WHEY-PROTEIN ISOLATE AND SODIUM DODECYL-SULFATE, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 44(2), 1996, pp. 438-443
The ability of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to plasticize edible films
from whey protein isolate (WPI) was assessed. SDS was not able to pla
sticize WPI films on its own, but it was an effective coplasticizer in
films containing either sorbitol or glycerol as the main plasticizer.
In films that contained sorbitol, a mass ratio of SDS to WPI (R(S:W))
of 0.2 resulted in films that were more extensible and more soluble b
ut with almost unchanged water vapor permeability (WVP). In films that
contained glycerol, the same R(S:W) resulted in less extensible and s
oluble films with slightly higher WVP values. Values of R(S:W) > 0.3 r
esulted in antiplasticization, although there was a reduction in WVP.
At R(S:W) > 1 films were so brittle that they could not be handled wit
hout breaking. The mechanical properties of WPI films that contained S
DS were comparable to published values for other proteinaceous, edible
films.