Reprint

Food Packaging

Materials and Technologies

Edited by
April 2019
216 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03897-766-7 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03897-767-4 (PDF)

This is a Reprint of the Special Issue Food Packaging: Materials and Technologies that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Physical Sciences
Summary

Because of the increasing pressure on both food safety and packaging/food waste, the topic is important both for academics, applied research, industry and also for environment protection. Different materials, such as glass, metals, paper and paperboards, and non-degradable and degradable polymers, with versatile properties, are attractive for potential uses in food packaging. Food packaging is the largest area of application within the food sector. Only the nanotechnology-enabled products in the food sector account for ~50% of the market value, with and the annual growth rate is 11.65%. Technological developments are also of great interest. In the food sector, nanotechnology is involved in packaging materials with extremely high gas barriers, antimicrobial properties, and also in nanoencapsulants for the delivery of nutrients, flavors, or aromas, antimicrobial, and antioxidant compounds. Applications of materials, including nanomaterials in packaging and food safety, are in forms of: edible films, polymer nanocomposites, as high barrier packaging materials, nanocoatings, surface biocides, silver nanoparticles as potent antimicrobial agents, nutrition and neutraceuticals, active/bioactive packaging, intelligent packaging, nanosensors and nanomaterial-based assays for the detection of food relevant analytes (gasses, small organic molecules and food-borne pathogens) and bioplastics.

Format
  • Paperback
License and Copyright
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
powdered rosemary ethanolic extract; poly(lactic acid); bioactive food packaging; biomaterials; polymer; nanocomposites; nanocoatings; food packaging; risks; smart nanomaterials; electrospinning; nanocoating; chitosan; vegetable oil; essential oil; cold-press oil; antimicrobial; antioxidant; edible film; alginate film; pectin film; essential oil; barrier properties; mechanical properties; graphene; carbon nanotubes; poly(lactic) acid; degradation; combustion; fire; risk analysis; chitosan; rosehip seed oil; montmorillonite nanoclay; antibacterial; antioxidant; food packaging; customization; product design; personalized design; reverse engineering; computer aid design (CAD); fused deposition modelling (FDM); packaging design; product design; mechanical properties; thermoforming; tensile test; 3D printing; simulation; technology; thiazolidine-4-one scaffold; chitosan; polymeric systems; antibacterial activity

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