Tereza Cristina Luque Castellane, ��rica Mendes Lopes,, Jo�£o Carlos Campanharo and Eliana Gertrudes de Macedo Lemos
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Material Sci Eng
The potential use of rhizobia under controlled fermentation conditions may result in the production of new extracellular polymeric
substances (EPS) having novel and superior properties that will open up new areas of industrial applications and thus increase
their demand. The production of EPS and the stability of emulsions formed with soybean oil, diesel oil and toluene using different
concentrations of purified EPS derived from wild-type and mutant strains of Rhizobium tropici SEMIA 4080 was investigated. The
EPS was defined as a heteropolysaccharide composed of six constituent monosaccharides that displayed higher intrinsic viscosity and
pseudoplastic non-Newtonian fluid behavior in an aqueous solution. It is remarkable that the wild-type strain of Rhizobium tropici
SEMIA 4080 were able to grow on diesel, as well as mutant strain (MUTZC3). The higher emulsifying activity was observed with
hexane and paraffin liquid oil, as shown by its emulsification index (E24) higher than 50%, SEMIA 4080 with values of 87.2 and 74.3%
and mutant (MUTZC3) strain with values 89.6 and 58.7% for hexane and paraffin liquid oil, respectively. These results demonstrate
that the EPS of R. tropici strains could be attractive for use in industrial and environmental applications, as it had higher intrinsic
viscosity and good emulsification activity.
Journal of Material Sciences & Engineering received 3677 citations as per Google Scholar report