| Literature DB >> 32022987 |
Sejin Choi1, Youngho Eom1,2, Seon-Mi Kim1, Da-Woon Jeong1, Jongmin Han1, Jun Mo Koo1, Sung Yeon Hwang1,3, Jeyoung Park1,3, Dongyeop X Oh1,3.
Abstract
Perishable foods at undesired temperatures can generate foodborne illnesses that present significant societal costs. To certify refrigeration succession in a food-supply chain, a flexible, easy-to-interpret, damage-tolerant, and sensitive time-temperature indicator (TTI) that uses a self-healing nanofiber mat is devised. This mat is opaque when refrigerated due to nanofiber-induced light scattering, but becomes irreversibly transparent at room temperature through self-healing-induced interfibrillar fusion leading to the appearance of a warning sign. The mat monitors both freezer (-20 °C) and chiller (2 °C) successions and its timer is tunable over the 0.5-22.5 h range through control of the polymer composition and film thickness. The thin mat itself serves as both a temperature sensor and display; it does not require modularization, accurately measures localized or gradient heat, and functions even after crushing, cutting, and when weight-loaded in a manner that existing TTIs cannot. It also contains no drainable chemicals and is attachable to various shapes because it operates through an intrinsic physical response.Entities:
Keywords: foodborne illness; self-healing nanofibers; thermodynamic energy; time-temperature indicators; transparency
Year: 2020 PMID: 32022987 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201907064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849