| Literature DB >> 30564581 |
Valérie Guillard1, Sébastien Gaucel1, Claudio Fornaciari2, Hélène Angellier-Coussy1, Patrice Buche1, Nathalie Gontard1.
Abstract
Packaging is an essential element of response to address key challenges of sustainable food consumption on the international scene, which is clearly about minimizing the environmental footprint of packed food. An innovative sustainable packaging aims to address food waste and loss reduction by preserving food quality, as well as food safety issues by preventing food-borne diseases and food chemical contamination. Moreover, it must address the long-term crucial issue of environmentally persistent plastic waste accumulation as well as the saving of oil and food material resources. This paper reviews the major challenges that food packaging must tackle in the near future in order to enter the virtuous loop of circular bio-economy. Some solutions are proposed to address pressing international stakes in terms of food and plastic waste reduction and end-of-life issues of persistent materials. Among potential solutions, production of microbial biodegradable polymers from agro-food waste residues seems a promising route to create an innovative, more resilient, and productive waste-based food packaging economy by decoupling the food packaging industry from fossil feed stocks and permitting nutrients to return to the soil. To respond to the lack of tools and approach to properly design and adapt food packaging to food needs, mathematical simulation, based on modeling of mass transfer and reactions into food/packaging systems are promising tools. The next generation of such modeling and tools should help the food packaging sector to validate usage benefit of new packaging solutions and chose, in a fair and transparent way, the best packaging solution to contribute to the overall decrease of food losses and persistent plastic accumulation.Entities:
Keywords: bio-sourced; biodegradable; food packaging; sustainability; waste-based
Year: 2018 PMID: 30564581 PMCID: PMC6288173 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Benefit of MAP (Modified Atmosphere Packaging) compare to a control with NO MAP to limit the degradation rate of strawberries “Charlotte” variety (graph on the right)-adapted from Matar et al. (10).
Summary of Tensile Properties (Tensile Strength, Tensile Modulus, and Strain at Break) and oxygen permeability of some Biodegradable Polymer Matrices [adapted from (21)].
| PCL | 19 à 21 | 0.21 à 0.33 | 300 à 897 | 26 |
| PBAT | >84 | 0.04 | >200 | – |
| PBSA (Bionolle) | 20 | 0.44 | 20 | – |
| PLA | 21 | 0.35 | 3 | 41 |
| P(HB-co-HV) with 3% HV | 40 | 3.5 | 5 | 1–7 |
| P(HB-co-HV) with 3% HV and 20% of milled wheat straw | 19.6 | 3.03 | 1.03 | – |
| Polypropylene | 34.5 | 1.7 | 400 | |
| Polyethylene -terephtalate | 56 | 2.2 | – | 0.72 |
| LDPE | 10 | 0.2 | 620 | 95.7 |
Measured at ambient temperature and 0% RH.
From Berthet et al. (.
From Khanna and Srivastava (.
From Auras et al. (.
From (.
Figure 2Microbial engineered polymers (example of PHA) permit conversion of food by-products into food bio-packaging (EcoBioCAP FP7 2011–2015).
Figure 3Prediction of the AITC active compound release (on the left) toward headspace as a function of quantity of active compound added in the formulation of the packaging and correlated predicted effect on the growth of Pseudomonas fluorescens (on the right) [adapted from (51)].
Overview of the current innovation status in the sustainable food packaging sector.
| Nb of scientific publications | 8,250 (900 in 2015) | 11,000 (1,400 in 2015) |
| Nb of patents | 89 (11 in 2015) | 754 (26 in 2015) |
| Nb of exploited patents | 53 (6 in 2015) | 452 (15 in 2015) |
| Current deployment ratio | 1% | 4% |
From the Web of Science.
Worldwide database/Espacenet.
calculated from the paper of Giuri et al. (.
Ratio of exploited patents on papers.
Something missing in table above—Active AND …… packaging.
Figure 4Main window of the DSS EcoBioCAp with indication of the values of permeances calculated for the case study Apricot and building of the multi-criteria query.
Figure 5Ranking of the most suitable packaging solutions proposed by the DSS EcoBioCAP for the case study “Apricot”.
Figure 6Current linear status of today's food packaging economy [data from (13)].
Figure 7Unlocking the circular economy potential of the food packaging chain, a prospect for the future.