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What makes ice cream smooth and creamy?

08-08-2015

Unilever used high-resolution tomography imaging to characterise the microstructure of ice cream.

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Company

Unilever

Challenge

The microstructure of ice crystals and air bubbles is critical to ice cream’s quality and sensory properties. Ice cream is inherently unstable, and temperature changes during transport, storage or even on exit from the customer’s freezer can all play a factor in destroying the microstructure of small ice crystals, leading to recrystallisation and a coarser structure.

Sample

Ice cream

Solution

Using the X-ray tomography setup of ID19 at low temperature, the microscopic structure of the ice cream became clear, showing the variations in structure of several samples, comparing fresh ice cream with samples that had undergone temperature abuse.

Benefits

The Unilever research was a challenge for the ID19 team, requiring a specialised in situ sample environment and highly-reduced acquisition times. The beam intensity at ID19, the detector system and the low temperature device compatible with high resolution (sample rotation over 180º) led to the high-quality 3D images with a voxel size of just 0.56 micrometres.

 

Comparison between fresh ice-cream and temperature-abused ice cream

Figure 1. Comparison between a) fresh ice-cream and b) “temperature-abused” ice cream clearly showing the larger ice crystals and air bubbles after temperature cycling. Image sizes = 725*725 px2 = 0.41x0.41 mm2.