A hydrocolloid is a colloidal system in which water is the continuous dispersion medium and the dispersed phase consists of hydrophilic (water-loving) macromolecules or fine particles—typically polysaccharides or proteins—that are capable of swelling, thickening, or forming a gel when dispersed in water.
In simpler terms: it’s a substance that, when mixed with water, doesn’t truly dissolve but instead forms a viscous suspension, a gel, or a stabilized dispersion.
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Plant/Seaweed gums | Agar, alginate (from seaweed), pectin (from fruit), guar gum, locust bean gum |
| Microbial gums | Xanthan gum, gellan gum |
| Animal proteins | Gelatin (from collagen) |
| Synthetic/Modified | Modified starch, carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) |
Key Properties
- Water-binding / hygroscopic: Can absorb and retain large amounts of water.
- Thickening / viscosity enhancement: Increases the consistency of aqueous systems.
- Gel formation: Under certain conditions (temperature, ion presence, pH), some hydrocolloids form thermally reversible (e.g., gelatin) or irreversible gels (e.g., alginate + Ca²⁺).
- Stabilizing / emulsifying: Can help keep emulsions (like salad dressing) from separating.
Major Applications
🍽️ Food Industry
Used as thickeners, gelling agents, stabilizers, and texture modifiers:
- Jellies & gummies → gelatin, pectin, agar
- Salad dressings & sauces → xanthan gum, guar gum
- Ice cream → prevents ice crystal growth (stabilizer)
🩺 Medical & Healthcare
- Hydrocolloid wound dressings: Occlusive or semi-occlusive patches containing gel-forming agents (e.g., sodium carboxymethylcellulose, pectin, gelatin) that absorb exudate and maintain a moist healing environment.
- Dental impression materials: Alginate hydrocolloid is commonly used to take molds of teeth.
💄 Pharmaceuticals & Cosmetics
- Used in creams, lotions, and gels as thickeners, film-formers, or sustained-release matrix materials in tablets.