A Study on the Release Persistence of Microencapsulated Tea Tree Essential Oil in Hotel Hot Spring Water

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Abstract

To improve business performance and achieve sustainable development through the concept of hot spring resource reuse, this study investigated the antibacterial effect of alginate-coated tea tree essential oil microcapsules and the effect of alginate microcapsules on the release of tea tree essential oil. The results revealed that 450 µm alginate/tea tree essential oil microcapsules (containing 720 ppm of tea tree essential oil) prepared using microfluidic assemblies effectively inhibited total bacteria, Escherichia coli, and Staphylococcus aureus in hot spring water. For alginate/tea tree essential oil microcapsules prepared under different conditions, at a fixed concentration of cross-linking reagents, the release time increased with the cross-linking time (10 min > 5 min > 1 min). At a fixed cross-linking time, the release time increased with the concentrations of cross-linking reagents (1 M > 0.5 M > 0.1 M). When the concentrations of cross-linking reagents and the cross-linking time were the same, the release time of cross-linking reagents increased with the strength of metal activity (Ca > Zn).

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APA

Hsu, J. L., Lin, T. Y., Chien, J. H., Hsu, C. H., Lin, H. H., & Yeh, A. C. (2022). A Study on the Release Persistence of Microencapsulated Tea Tree Essential Oil in Hotel Hot Spring Water. Water (Switzerland), 14(9). https://doi.org/10.3390/w14091391

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