Abstract

Packaging was recently identified as an essential element in addressing the key challenge of sustainable food supply and is gaining interest among researchers. It is a central element in food quality preservation due to its role in heat and mass exchange with the external atmosphere, contributing to the preservation of food quality during storage and extending food shelf life. This work proposes three new packaging configurations with the same size but different geometry and ventilation hole sizes and geometry, that change the conditions in which the heat and mass exchange occurs, during either the cooling period of fruits, inside the cooling chamber, or during the period when the packaging is exposed to ambient conditions, outside the cooling chamber. For this purpose, packages with fruit models that replicate the properties of real fruit were subjected to a cooling process inside a cooling chamber for 8 h. Subsequently, during the heating phase, the packages were exposed to ambient conditions for 10 h. Thermal conditions were also monitored, both inside and outside the chamber. Additionally, for comparative purposes, the thermal behavior of commercial packaging was also evaluated for the same operating conditions in the cooling and heating phases. The results show that the new packages do not substantially promote the preservation of fruits in the cooling phase, but in the heating phase, they ensure an extension of the period with proper thermal conditions of up to 50% in relation to the conventional packaging. This result is particularly important since the heating phase, in which fruits are outside the storage chamber, is the period with the greatest impact on the fruits’ useful life.

Highlights

  • The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations states that around 33% of the sustenance delivered worldwide for human consumption is being wasted, representing circa 1.3 billion tons of resources [1]

  • This paper proposes three new packaging configurations with the same size but differing in geometry and size of ventilation holes, changing the conditions in which the heat and mass exchange occurs, either during the cooling of produce in the cooling chamber or during the period when packaging is exposed to ambient conditions, outside the cooling chamber

  • Since refrigeration entails high energy consumption, it is important to achieve the ideal storage temperature for perishable food products as quickly as possible, and it is very important to maintain it for as long as possible, even when produce are subjected to non-ideal conditions

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Summary

Introduction

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations states that around 33% of the sustenance delivered worldwide for human consumption is being wasted, representing circa 1.3 billion tons of resources [1]. This is estimated at almost USD 680 billion in industrialized nations and USD 310 billion in developing nations [1]. There are various types of loss concerning fruits and vegetables, which include mechanical damage or spillage during harvest operations, the degradation that occurs during handling, storage and transportation, waste in the market system as well as waste during consumption [2]

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