The present invention relates to aqueous emulsions from oily active substances for use in the cosmetic, food and pharmaceutical industries.
The domains of cosmetic, food and pharmaceutical industries have a great variety of oily active substances, i.e. lipophilic or hydrophobic: vegetal oils, essential oils, fragrance concentrates, oily active substances for cosmetic, food or pharmaceutical products. It is very interesting to produce aqueous emulsions from these: oily active substances, and for one important reason: water is the most appropriate vehicle for the human body, whether externally (fragrances and cosmetic applications) or internally (food or pharmaceutical applications). Oil in water emulsions have long been produced with the aid of various chemical emulsifiers, but these emulsifiers have notorious drawbacks:—there are generally badly tolerated by the human body, —they should be used in a significant concentration with regards to the active substances. While the cyclodextrins technology is an alternative, it also imposes several constraints which greatly reduce its use. On the other hand, the use of saponins has been considered, which are vegetal emulsifiers which belong to the class of carbohydrates (heterosides). A first application category uses significant amounts of auxiliary substances (carbohydrates, ethanol, . . . . )which distort the final emulsion. A second application mode does not make use of auxiliary substances, as is provided by the patent FR 02 14436, but in practice, with a satisfactory fluidity and stability it does not allow to rise significantly beyond a concentration of 30% of the emulsion in oily phase, which is an uncomfortable limitation, specifically for certain cosmetic applications.
To date, none of the known processes have allowed the production of fluid and stable aqueous emulsions containing more than 40% of the oil phase with less than 1% of vegetable emulsifier.
To address the above-mentioned concerns, starting from the process described in the patent FR0214436, the applicant has explored several paths, in particular:
None of the used paths alone has achieved the intended purpose.
After several years of research and trials, the applicant has developed a process allowing for the production of aqueous emulsions from oily aqueous substances in the cosmetic, food and pharmaceutical industries, whereby such process eliminates the drawbacks of the currently applicable technologies, allowing the production of fluid and stable aqueous emulsions containing more than 40% of the oily phase with less than 1% of vegetal emulsifier. In this manner, the invention relates to the process of manufacturing an aqueous emulsion from an oily active substance for cosmetic, food or pharmaceutical use, including the following steps:
The average diameter of the oily droplets is determined by the traditional granulometry measurement.
The optimal emulsifying concentration and the operating parameters of the homogenizers must be established by preliminary tests, in view of the diversity of the oily substances to be emulsified, the required concentrations and the equipment to be employed.
Only the combination of saponins+homogenization n°1+homogenization n°2 allows to obtain a fluid and stable aqueous emulsion containing 40% of the oily phase, with less than 1% of vegetal emulsifier.
Thus, if another emulsifier is used, one of the 2 homogenization steps is lacking, or the indicated values are not complied with, the mentioned result cannot be obtained.
It is not at all obvious that the combination of these 3 elements ensures the achievement of the intended purpose. Then, neither was this developed before.
Below a description is given of some of the results observed with combinations differing from those in the invention, whereby the example mentioned in paragraph 4 is taken as a basis.
Advantageously, at least one hydrophilic additive is added to the mix of hydrophilic components and at least one lipophilic additive is added to the mix of lipophilic components.
Additives are defined as supplementary substances such as preservatives, anti-oxidizers, sequestrants, etc., which ensure the preservation of the active substance.
Instead of additives, another preservation means can be used, such as a sterilization step of the whole of the homogenized emulsion.
The obtained emulsions are always milky.
In some applications, it is possible or recommended to use at least one natural or synthetic co-emulsifier in addition to the saponins.
It should finally be noted that the very fluid emulsions in the invention may serve as a basis for the production of gels or creams by the addition of a thickener(s) suitable for their application.
An aqueous emulsion of vegetal oil of 40% is made.
The emulsion components and their mass % are as follows.
Hydrophilic components—Demineralized water (continuous phase): 58.7%—Pure saponins (emulsifier): 0.8% Lipophilic components—Vegetal oils (dispersed phase): 40.0%—Microcare MTD 2 of Thor (preservative): 0.5% Total: 100.0%. The hydrophilic components and the lipophilic components are separately mixed in order to obtain homogeneous phases. The homogenization n°1 of the two phases is performed with a rotor stator type mixer of the Ultra-Turrax trademark, at 20.000 revolutions/minute. The homogenization n°2 of the preceding mix is performed with a high-pressure mixer of the APV trademark, in recycling mode, with a service pressure of 600 bar.
A fluid and stable milky emulsion is obtained.
The homogenization times must be experimentally established and depend on the nature of the vegetal oils and the characteristics of the homogenizers.
The values for the different mixes with the above-stated equipment are provided below for lots of 1 kg each.
Minimum homogenization times
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2012/076948 | 12/27/2012 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/101941 | 7/3/2014 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5900257 | Breton | May 1999 | A |
20080107777 | Butler | May 2008 | A1 |
20100173854 | Dominowski | Jul 2010 | A1 |
20100267842 | Kiral et al. | Oct 2010 | A1 |
20140057991 | Chevalier | Feb 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1327434 | Jul 2003 | EP |
2359698 | Aug 2011 | EP |
2847163 | May 2004 | FR |
2945936 | Dec 2010 | FR |
WO 2004047787 | Jun 2004 | WO |
WO2004087204 | Oct 2004 | WO |
WO2011067672 | Jun 2011 | WO |
WO2011154407 | Dec 2011 | WO |
WO2013135759 | Sep 2013 | WO |
Entry |
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Machine Translation of FR2945936, 2010. |
International Search Report dated Dec. 4, 2013 from corresponding PCT Application No. PCT/EP2012/076948 from International Searching Authority (EPO) (4 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150327566 A1 | Nov 2015 | US |