| Literature DB >> 35804701 |
Danfei Liu1, Changfan Zhang1, Yumei Pu1, Siyuan Chen1, Lei Liu1, Zijie Cui1, Yunfei Zhong1.
Abstract
Recently, due to the enhancement in consumer awareness of food safety, considerable attention has been paid to intelligent packaging that displays the quality status of food through color changes. Natural food colorants show useful functionalities (antibacterial and antioxidant activities) and obvious color changes due to their structural changes in different acid and alkali environments, which could be applied to detect these acid and alkali environments, especially in the preparation of intelligent packaging. This review introduces the latest research on the progress of pH-responsive freshness indicators based on natural food colorants and biodegradable polymers for monitoring packaged food quality. Additionally, the current methods of detecting food freshness, the preparation methods for pH-responsive freshness indicators, and their applications for detecting the freshness of perishable food are highlighted. Subsequently, this review addresses the challenges and prospects of pH-responsive freshness indicators in food packaging, to assist in promoting their commercial application.Entities:
Keywords: food quality; freshness indicator; intelligent packaging technology; natural food colorants; pH-responsive
Year: 2022 PMID: 35804701 PMCID: PMC9265506 DOI: 10.3390/foods11131884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1Classification scheme for nondestructive rapid detection techniques in food analysis.
Figure 2Color changes and mechanisms for: (A) anthocyanins [5]; (B) curcumin [76]; (C) alizarin at different pH values [77]. Source: reprinted with permission from Liu et al. [5], 2021, Elsevier; Ezati et al. [76], 2020, Elsevier; and Roy et al. [77], 2021, ACS.
Figure 3The preparation methods for freshness indicators: (A) electrospinning; (B) compression molding; (C) solvent casting; (D) extrusion.
Methods of developing pH-responsive freshness indicators.
| Materials | Colorants | Methods | Food Sample | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pectin/Sulfur nanoparticles | Curcumin | Solvent Casting | Shrimp | [ |
| Chitosan/Microcrystalline cellulose | Curcumin | Solvent Casting | No date | [ |
| Poly (vinyl | Bromophenol blue, Bromocresol green | Extrusion | No date | [ |
| Low-density | Bromophenol blue | Extrusion | Fish | [ |
| Low-density polyethylene (LDPE) | Curcumin | Extrusion | Silver carp/Beef | [ |
| Chitosan/Polyethylene oxide | Curcumin | Electrospinning | Chicken breast | [ |
| Fish gelatin | Anthocyanin | Compression Molding | No date | [ |
| Cassava starch/Laponite | Anthocyanin | Compression Molding | Round steak | [ |
| Potato flakes/Sodium alginate powder/Citric acid | Anthocyanin | 4D printing | No date | [ |
Natural-colorants-based pH-responsive freshness indicators for monitoring freshness of food products.
| Tested Food | Natural Colorants | Source of Natural Colorants | Polymer Materials | pH Values/Color Variations | Colorant Concentrations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pork and shrimp | Curcumin | Curcuma longa | k-carrageenan | 3 and 13 | Ethanol | [ |
| Pork | Anthocyanin | Prunus maackii | κ-carrageenan/hydroxypropyl methylcellulose | 3–11 | 0, 2, 4, 8, and 16% ( | [ |
| Chicken | Anthocyanin | Blueberry residue | Cassava starch | 2–11 | 4 g blueberry residue powder/100 g cassava starch | [ |
| Chicken/fish | Betalains | Amaranthus leaf | Polyvinyl alcohol/gelatin | 2–11 | 5% Amaranthus leaf extract ( | [ |
| Minced beef | Alizarin | Roots of Madder family plants | Cellulose/chitosan | 2–11 | 1% ( | [ |
| Seafood/meat | Alizarin | Roots of Madder family | Carboxymethyl Cellulose/Agar | 2–12 | 1.0% ( | [ |
| Fish | Anthocyanin | Black | Bacterial nanocellulose | 2–11 | 6 mg/mL | [ |
| Fish (Bighead carp) | Curcumin (CR)/anthocyanin (ATH) | Curcuma longa/Purple sweet potatoes | Starch/polyvinyl alcohol | 5–11 | 4%( | [ |
| Fish (Hair tail) and shrimp | Curcumin | Curcuma longa | Chitosan (CS)/oxidized chitin nanocrystal (O-ChNCs) | 3–10 | 10% ( | [ |
| Fish (Rainbow trout fillet) | Alizarin | Roots of Madder family plants | Starch-cellulose | 2–11 | 1% ( | [ |
| Shrimp | Betalains | Hylocereus polyrhizus | Starch/polyvinyl | 3–12 | 0.25, 0.50 and 1.00% ( | [ |
| Shrimp | Anthocyanin | Red rose | Polyvinyl alcohol/okra mucilage | 2–12 | 1, 2, 3, and 4% ( | [ |
| Shrimp | Anthocyanin | Echium amoenum flowers | Bacterial cellulose | 2–12 | 1:1 dilution of extract solution | [ |
| Milk | Anthocyanin | Mulberry | κ-carrageenan | 2–13 | 1.5, 2.5, | [ |
| Milk | Anthocyanin | Grape skins | Tara gum/cellulose | 1–10 | 5 g/100 g, 10 g/ 100 g, and 15 g/100 g (tara gum basis) | [ |
| Milk | Anthocyanin | Red cabbage | Polyvinyl alcohol/ starch | No date | No date | [ |
| Cheese | Anthocyanin | Red | Polyvinylpyrrolidone/CMC/Bacterial cellulose/Guar gum | 1–14 | No date | [ |
The color variations of natural-colorants-based indicators used to monitor food freshness.
| Indicator | Food | pH | Color Variation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Based on starch-cellulose and alizarin | Fish (rainbow trout fillet) 4 °C | 2–11 |
| [ |
| Based on starch/polyvinyl alcohol | Fish (4 °C) | 2–12 |
| [ |
| Based on polyvinyl alcohol/sodium carboxymethyl | Pork (25 °C) | 2–12 |
| [ |
| Based on polyvinyl alcohol/okra mucilage polysaccharide | Shrimp | 2–12 |
| [ |
| Based on | Milk | 2–10 |
| [ |
| Based on cellulose nanofibers and blueberry anthocyanin | Lychees | 2–12 |
| [ |
| Based on | Banana | 3–8 |
| [ |
Figure 4(A) Principle of electrochemical writing on pH-sensitive films. (B) The structure transformation of red radish anthocyanins in acidic and basic conditions. Source: reprinted with permission from Zhai et al. [150], 2018, ACS.