Food Packaging: Materials and Technologies

Front Cover
Cornelia Vasile, Morten Sivertsvik
MDPI, Apr 18, 2019 - Technology & Engineering - 216 pages

Because of the increasing pressure on both food safety and packaging/food waste, the topic is important both for academics, applied research, industry and also for environment protection. Different materials, such as glass, metals, paper and paperboards, and non-degradable and degradable polymers, with versatile properties, are attractive for potential uses in food packaging. Food packaging is the largest area of application within the food sector. Only the nanotechnology-enabled products in the food sector account for ~50% of the market value, with and the annual growth rate is 11.65%. Technological developments are also of great interest. In the food sector, nanotechnology is involved in packaging materials with extremely high gas barriers, antimicrobial properties, and also in nanoencapsulants for the delivery of nutrients, flavors, or aromas, antimicrobial, and antioxidant compounds. Applications of materials, including nanomaterials in packaging and food safety, are in forms of: edible films, polymer nanocomposites, as high barrier packaging materials, nanocoatings, surface biocides, silver nanoparticles as potent antimicrobial agents, nutrition and neutraceuticals, active/bioactive packaging, intelligent packaging, nanosensors and nanomaterial-based assays for the detection of food relevant analytes (gasses, small organic molecules and food-borne pathogens) and bioplastics. 

 

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About the author (2019)

Cornelia Vasile (Dr) is senior researcher, head of Physical Chemistry of Polymers group at ”P. Poni” Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry of the Romanian Academy, Iasi, associate professor—Laval University, Quebec, Canada, “Gh. Asachi” Technical University and ”Al. I. Cuza” University of Iasi. Main research interests: Nanomaterials, Smart polymers; Biomaterials, Food packaging (active, bioactive, smart, (bio)degradable), Nanotherapeutics, New Drugs, Kinetics of Polymer Decomposition; Enzymatic Degradation; Recovery of Polymer Wastes by Destructive and non-Destructive Procedures; Environmental Pollution and Protection; Thermal Methods of Investigation; Awards and honours: ”N. Teclu” distinction of the Romanian Academy; 16 Eight distinctions (gold or silver medals) awarded at the ”Inventica”and EUROINVENT; Excellence Diploma and medal for participation to European Community for Research Projects; Best paper award from The Japan Society of Material Cycles and Waste Management; Member of Editorial Board of 12 journals; Scientific achievements: Books: Editor of the 16 books, Author of the 4 books. Chapters in the Books published: 120; Publications: more than 650; Patents: 46; Technical Papers: more than 90; International and National Research projects: more than 70 mainly as project leader. 

Morten Sivertsvik (Dr.) is research director of department of processing technology in the food, fisheries and aquaculture research institute, Nofima AS, in Norway. Morten has been working in Nofima for 27 years as a scientist or research leader and has been involved in numerous seafood processing, preservation and packaging related innovation projects. Morten has a PhD on food packaging technology from NMBU, and a MSc in chemical engineering (NTNU). He has authored around 50 peer-reviewed papers, several book chapters and has participated in among other in the following ongoing or recent international projects; n-Chitopack (FP7SME-315233, WP-leader), ForBioPlast (FP7KBBE-212239); SafeFishDish (CofaspEranet-351, WP leader); ActiBioSafe (EEA-JRP-RO-NO2013-1-0296, WP leader); FutureEUAqua (H2020-817737). Morten is also editor-in-chief of Journal of Aquatic Food Products Technology. 

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