Abstract

There is an increasing interest for active food packaging incorporated with natural antimicrobial agents rather than synthetic preservatives. However, most of plastics for direct contact with food are made of polyolefins, usually processed by extrusion, injection, or blow-molding methods while most of natural antimicrobial molecules are thermolabile compounds (e.g., essential oils). Therefore, addition of plant phenolics (with low volatility) to different polyolefins might be promising to design active controlled release packaging processed by usual plastic compounding and used for direct contact with food products. Therefore, up to 2% (wt/wt) of isobutyl-4-hydroxybenzoate (IBHB) was mixed with 3 polyolefins: EVA poly(ethylene-co-vinyl acetate), LLDPE (Linear Low Density Polyethylene), and PP (PolyPropylene) by melt-blending from 75 to 170°C and then pelletized in order to prepare heat-pressed films. IBHB was chosen as an antibacterial phenolic active model molecule against Staphylococcus aureus to challenge the entire processing. Antibacterial activity of films against S. aureus (procedure adapted from ISO 22196 standard) were 4, 6, and 1 decimal reductions in 24 h for EVA, LLDPE, and PP films, respectively, demonstrating the preservation of the antibacterial activity after melt processing. For food contact materials, the efficacy of antimicrobial packaging depends on the release of the antimicrobial molecules. Therefore, the three types of films were placed at 23°C in 95% (v/v) ethanol and the release rates of IBHB were monitored: 101 ± 1%, 32 ± 7%, and 72 ± 9% at apparent equilibrium for EVA, LLDPE, and PP films, respectively. The apparent diffusion coefficients of IBHB in EVA and PP films were 2.8 ± 0.3 × 10−12 and 4.0 ± 1.0 × 10−16 m2s−1. For LLDPE films, IBHB crystals were observed on the surface of films by SEM (Scanning Electron Microscopy): this blooming effect was due the partial incompatibility of IBHB in LLDPE and its fast diffusion out of the polymer matrix onto the film surface. In conclusion, none of these three materials was suitable for a relevant controlled release packaging targeting the preservation of fresh food, but a combination of two of them is promising by the design of a multilayer packaging: the release could result from permeation through an inner PE layer combined with an EVA one acting as a reservoir.

Highlights

  • Active food packaging incorporated with antimicrobial molecules are deeply studied face to the following dilemma: the consumer demand for natural, minimally processed, or ready-to-eat fresh food and the problem of food waste induced by microbial spoilage

  • Every extrusion and film forming processed well, as expected, except for PP for which slight off-odors were noticed which could be due to IBHB presence, as nothing was detected for virgin PP

  • Antimicrobial activity was preserved despite of both thermal and mechanical treatments applied during film elaboration, especially for LLDPE and ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer (EVA) films.This demonstrates the possibility to prepare active films based on LLDPE or EVA containing antimicrobial phenolics such as IBHB by extrusion at high temperature

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Summary

Introduction

Active food packaging incorporated with antimicrobial molecules are deeply studied face to the following dilemma: the consumer demand for natural, minimally processed, or ready-to-eat fresh food (e.g., free from synthetic preservatives) and the problem of food waste induced by microbial spoilage. Examination of literature reveals that most of active packaging films were prepared by the solvent casting technique, when made from biodegradable polymers or polysaccharides while most of industrial packaging films (polyolefins, polyesters, polystyrene, polyamides) are prepared by extrusion, except coatings for dedicated studies (Del Nobile et al, 2009; Akrami et al, 2015; Gherardi et al, 2016; Wrona et al, 2017; Wu et al, 2018) This issue includes: (i) the selection of packaging polymers which must fulfill the technical specifications met in the packaging industry like easy processing at the molten state with existing facilities (melt-blending), transparency, machinability, sealing ability, and food contact grade (Han and Floros, 1997; Siracusa, 2016). The incorporated percentages are generally in between 0.5 and up to 15% wt/wt (Del Nobile et al, 2009; Ramos et al, 2012; Torres et al, 2014), or even more (up to 30%) when embedded in polysaccharides, proteins, or biodegradable polymers (Del Nobile et al, 2008) in order to reach either the MIC

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