| Literature DB >> 33764212 |
Vicente M Gómez-López1, Gianpiero Pataro2, Brijesh Tiwari3, Mario Gozzi4, María Ángela A Meireles5, Shaojin Wang6, Buenaventura Guamis7, Zhongli Pan8, Hosahalli Ramaswamy9, Sudhir Sastry10, Florent Kuntz11, Patrick J Cullen12, Sriram K Vidyarthi8, Bo Ling6, Joan Miquel Quevedo13, Alain Strasser11, Giuseppe Vignali14, Priscilla C Veggi15, Ramon Gervilla13, Heidi Maria Kotilainen16, Massimiliano Pelacci17, Juliane Viganó15, Antonio Morata18.
Abstract
In the last decades, different non-thermal and thermal technologies have been developed for food processing. However, in many cases, it is not clear which experimental parameters must be reported to guarantee the experiments' reproducibility and provide the food industry a straightforward way to scale-up these technologies. Since reproducibility is one of the most important science features, the current work aims to improve the reproducibility of studies on emerging technologies for food processing by providing guidelines on reporting treatment conditions of thermal and non-thermal technologies. Infrared heating, microwave heating, ohmic heating and radiofrequency heating are addressed as advanced thermal technologies and isostatic high pressure, ultra-high-pressure homogenization sterilization, high-pressure homogenization, microfluidization, irradiation, plasma technologies, power ultrasound, pressure change technology, pulsed electric fields, pulsed light and supercritical CO2 are approached as non-thermal technologies. Finally, growing points and perspectives are highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced thermal technologies; dosimetry; non-thermal technologies; reproducibility; scaling-up
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33764212 DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2021.1895058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr ISSN: 1040-8398 Impact factor: 11.208