Rezende, StephanySantamaria-Echart, ArantzazuAlmeida, Heloísa H.S.Marcet, IsmaelCarpintero, MariaRendueles, ManuelLopretti, MaryDias, Madalena M.Barreiro, M.F.2025-01-132025-01-132025Rezende, Stephany Cunha de; Santamaria-Echart, Arantzazu; Almeida, Heloísa; Helena Scorsato; Marcet, Ismael; Carpintero, Maria; Rendueles, Manuel; Lopretti, Mary; Dias, Madalena Maria; Barreiro, Maria Filomena (2025). Solid dispersions as effective curcumin vehicles to obtain k-carrageenan functional films for olive oil preservation. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules. ISSN 0141-8130. 286, p. 1-110141-8130http://hdl.handle.net/10198/30928Synthetic packaging materials offer cost efficiency and performance but pose environmental risks. This study explores sustainable alternatives by developing k-carrageenan (KC) films functionalized with curcumin, using solid dispersions (SDs) to improve curcumin's compatibility, addressing the challenge of incorporating hydrophobic functionalities into hydrophilic film matrices. Films with varying curcumin content (1–20 wt%; KC1- KC20) were compared to a base film without curcumin (KC0) regarding water solubility, vapor permeability, water contact angle, and tensile properties. Compared to KC0, KC10 (10 % curcumin-SDs) exhibited improved water resistance, with solubility decreasing from 82.89 % to 77.18 %, while maintaining vapor permeability (2.96 × 10 10 g⋅m/s⋅m2⋅Pa). KC10 demonstrated enhanced tensile properties, with a 12.51 % increase in tensile modulus (241.47 MPa), a 3.86 % increase in stress at break (3.50 MPa), and a 4.42 % increase in strain at break (2.36 %). Furthermore, it exhibited potent antioxidant activity without releasing curcumin into a simulated fatty medium (non-migratory active protection mechanism), effectively preserving olive oil by limiting lipid oxidation to a peroxide value (PV) of 14 mEq. O2/kg oil, compared to 20 mEq. O2/kg oil in unprotected samples under accelerated conditions. It demonstrated significant antimicrobial activity with bacterial reductions of 95.4 % (Escherichia coli) and 90.6 % (Listeria monocytogenes), surpassing KC0. In conclusion, k-carrageenan films functionalized with curcumin SDs are promising and sustainable alternatives to synthetic packaging materials.engK-carrageenan polymeric filmsCurcumin compatibilization mediated by solidDispersionsActive food packagingOlive oil preservationSolid dispersions as effective curcumin vehicles to obtain k-carrageenan functional films for olive oil preservationjournal article10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.138446