One
of the most significant aspects of food regulatory authorities and industries
today are to provide safe food, which is facing unprecedented challenges around
the world, where estimated toll of foodborne diseases at a frightening 600
million cases with 420,000 deaths each year. Nonetheless, most frequent pathogens linked
with these foodborne illnesses include diarrheal agents such as norovirus
and Campylobactor spp, as well other bacterial pathogens such
as Salmonella enterica and typhi, Listeria and Brucella.
There
are several different preventative methods exist in order to minimize the risks
associated with foodborne illnesses, such as freezing, heat and refrigeration
storage, filtration, drying and chemical methods, as well as radiation and
other thermal procedures. On the other hand, these techniques are often
associated with high-energy costs, an increased possibility of degradation, as
well as serious occupational and health implications with significant drawbacks
that are not in compliance with the current consumer trend for greener and
chemical free approaches.
Consumers
are demanding better food safety – usually it was the regulators who had taken
the lead when it comes to driving food safety, which is changing where consumers
are more knowledgeable and engaged who are demanding higher standards following
high profile incidents consumers in the past and voting with their wallets if
they are not met. The reputational and business damage of food safety failures
are greater than ever, where even new sentencing guidelines were introduced in
2016. Proactive businesses should therefore embrace food safety and use high
standards to differentiate from the competition.
Dining
trends are changing
– the most of the people living in urban environments where more and more people
are eating out, which is great news for the industry, but it also brings the
challenges, as pressure increases on suppliers, i.e. city restaurants to serve
more customers, they need more suppliers to deliver more of the fresh
ingredients needed, seven days a week, year round, which brings more risks to
the produce. Nonetheless, consumer preferences are constantly changing, meaning
that delivering what they want is essential to building a successful business.
Maintaining food safety standards while being able to keep up with demand is
also vital, where companies should look at how automation in monitoring can
help here.
Traceability
is key to the experience – the horsemeat scandal highlighted issues around fraud
in the food supply chain, and demonstrated that consumers want traceability of
what they eat, who are also increasingly looking for healthy, high quality,
locally sourced ingredients. Traceability demands for a greater auditing of
supply chains to ensure that food can be monitored from field to fork. As we
move towards 2020, food businesses that can vouch for the origins of their food
will have a major competitive advantage.
The
future of food safety is digital – today the kitchens in most restaurants rely
on paper-based checks and records. These are inefficient, time-consuming, prone
to human error and easy to falsify. Thus, technologies such as automated
monitoring, digital checklists and Internet of Things-based sensors will
replace paper which is available now, and allows businesses to monitor and
control every aspect of routine tasks and compliance management, proving their
credentials to both diners and regulators, while increasing efficiency and
being ready for 2020.
What
is Nanotechnology?
Nanotechnology
involves the use of very small particles (nanoparticles) that have an average size,
in at least one dimension, of one hundred nanometers (nm) or less. A nanometer
is one billionth of a meter. The chemical and physical characteristics of nanomaterials
can be vary considerably from those of their larger counterparts, often turning
an ordinary unreactive material into a highly reactive substance.
Even
though still an emerging science, nanotechnology has been in use for production
of goods such as cosmetics, where nanotechnology holds significant promise as a
tool in the diagnosis and treatment of certain human illnesses. However, the
interaction of nanoparticles with humans, animals and the environment has yet
to be fully explored despite the numerous benefits associated with
nanotechnology, since nanotechnology is viewed by the food industry as a means
of enhancing food safety and nutrient bioavailability.
Nanoparticles
have a considerably greater surface area to mass ratio than their larger
counterparts which can alter physical and chemical properties such as
reactivity and surface charge. As an example, gold at the macro scale conducts
electricity, is chemically unreactive and yellow in colour, which is in
contrast, gold at the nanoscale is a semiconductor, highly reactive and varies
in colour from pink to red or orange, depending on how small the particles are.
The small dimensions of nanoparticles also means they can reach locations in
the human body not normally accessible to larger counterparts. However, the
full impact of nanoparticles and their novel properties on the health of
humans, animals and the environment is not fully understood at this time.
Why
Nanotechnology?
As
a novel technology, nanotechnology has been considered as an attractive
technology that can revolutionized the food sector due to its increasing use over
the past few decades. It is a technology on the nanometer scale which deals
with the atoms, molecules, or the macromolecules with the size of approximately
1–100 nm to create and use materials that have novel properties. Thus, created
nanomaterials possess one or more external dimensions, or an internal
structure, on the scale from 1 to 100 nm that allowed the observation and
manipulation of matter at the nanoscale. Hence, nanotechnologies enable the
management of food ingredients on a molecular level, where nanotechnology
products could have a potential of substantial impact on the food/feed manufacturing
sector offering benefits for industry and the consumer.
It
is observed that these materials have unique properties unlike their macroscale
counterparts due to the high surface to volume ratio and other novel
physiochemical properties like color, solubility, strength, diffusivity,
toxicity, magnetic, optical, thermodynamic, etc., because technologies
involving the control of matter on nanotechnology is in the atomic and
molecular scale, normally below 100 nanometers. Under such circumstances, the nanomaterials
may exhibit different physical and chemical properties compared with the same
substances at normal scale, such as increased chemical reactivity due to
greater surface area. Thus, nanotechnology has brought new industrial
revolution in both developed and developing countries with massive investments
from both private and public sectors. Therefore, nanotechnology offers a wide
range of opportunities for the development and application of structures,
materials, or system with new properties in various areas like agriculture,
food, and medicine, etc. In fact, nanotechnology, as a rising field of interest
in almost every industry, has found over 276 different applications in
agricultural, food and feed markets where most common applications of nanotechnology
in food safety and quality has contributed to development of nano-encapsulated
agrochemicals, food additives and supplements, and antimicrobial active food packaging
agents.
The
rising consumer concerns about food quality, safety and health benefits are major
impelling reason for researchers to rethink the ways of enhancing food quality
while minimizing the degradation of nutritional value in final product. The
demand of nanoparticle-based materials is increased in the food industry, since
many of them contain essential elements are mostly non-toxic and stable at high
temperature and pressures, where nanotechnology can offer complete food
solutions from food manufacturing, processing to packaging. Nanomaterials bring
about a great difference not only in the food quality and safety but also in
health benefits, where many organizations, researchers, and industries are
coming up with novel techniques, methods, and products that have a direct
application of nanotechnology in food science.
Nanotechnology
Applications in Foods
1. Food nanostructured ingredients
Food nanostructured
ingredients encompass a wide area from food processing to food packaging. In
food processing, theses nanostructures can be used as food additives, carriers
for smart delivery of nutrients, anti-caking agents, antimicrobial agents,
fillers for improving mechanical strength and durability of the packaging
material, etc.
2. Food nano-sensing
The food nano-sensing
can be applied to achieve better food quality and safety evaluation. In this
review, we have summarized the role of nanotechnology in food science and food
microbiology and also discussed some negative facts associated with this
technology.
Applications
of nanotechnology have emerged with increasing need of nanoparticle uses in various fields of food science and food microbiology, including food
processing, food packaging, functional food development, food safety, detection
of foodborne pathogens, and shelf-life extension of food and/or food products. However,
aspects of application of nanotechnology in relation to increasing the nutrition
and organoleptic properties of foods also should be considered from the perspectives
of safety issues and regulatory concerns on nano-processed food products. Since, companies and institutes in many part of the world are
currently conducting industrial researches and developing applications in
fields such as the treatment of the mechanical and sensorial properties of food
i.e. to achieve changed taste or texture and modified nutritional value, but
such applications need to be pretested thoroughly before human use.
Nanotechnology may also be used in food packaging, for instance to ensure
better protection or to detect how fresh food is, where specific properties and
characteristics of nanomaterials need to be considered for any potential health
risks.
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