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FARM NEWS
Chitosan, a sustainable alternative for food packaging
by Staff Writers
Biscay, Spain (SPX) Jan 13, 2015


The chitosan film maintains the properties of the carrots. Image courtesy UPV/EHU.

Food items are covered with plastic films to make them last longer and protect them from microbes. The environment, however, is seriously affected by the use of this material. The plastic bottles and films present everywhere in our civilisation take between 100 and 400 years to degrade. So the quest for alternative materials to plastics produced from petroleum is an environmental priority.

Various products and substances are used to manufacture these materials: cellulose, potatoes, etc.; and in this case, chitosan. "Chitosan is made out of the shells of prawns, king prawns and other crustaceans. The environment benefits from the use of this waste material and, what is more, the resulting product, chitosan, is biodegradable," said Leceta. "Chitosan also has antimicrobial properties, so it is highly suited to the food industry, as it reduces the microbial load -in this case- of carrots. That is why their properties have been preserved better", added the researcher.

Which is better: the devil or the deep blue sea?
Although the results of laboratory tests have been satisfactory, the massive industrial use of chitosan for packaging food is a distant goal. "We have to go on conducting research. Just as with renewable energies, it is better to have various options -to produce a mix- rather than just to have only one. You have to work with different polymers, to reduce the use of petroleum-based materials as much as possible," said Leceta.

In any case, she rates the work done positively: "If we take into consideration the whole life cycle, in many environmental categories our material is better than that which is manufactured using petroleum by-products. The key is the environment, and that has been the cornerstone of my thesis. If we don't manage to manufacture a material that is better from the environmental perspective, there will be no point in our work".

But not all that glitters is gold, and this is what Leceta too believes: "Chitosan film is better than plastic film in terms of the environmental impact, in a range of categories, but that does not mean it does not pollute. The manufacturing of chitosan, unlike the production of conventional plastics, has yet to be optimised.

Once it has been optimised, the environmental impact of chitosan will be reduced even further". In short, every option has its downside, so the one that causes the least damage has to be chosen: "There is a saying about what is 'better', the devil or the deep blue sea. Well, we, too, often have to opt for the lesser evil," said the researcher.

The work for this PhD thesis was mostly done at the Polytechnic School of Donostia-San Sebastian. Itsaso Leceta also spent three months at University College Cork-UCC (Cork, Ireland), after which she published the research work Quality attributes of map packaged ready-to-eat baby carrots by using chitosan-based coatings, using the results of the collaboration with the Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences of University College Cork. The research work done in collaboration with the Department of Applied Chemistry of the UPV/EHU's Faculty of Chemistry were also published in the PhD thesis.

Itsaso Leceta (Donostia-San Sebastian, 1985) studied Chemical Engineering at the Faculty of Engineering in Bilbao (UPV/EHU), and has a Master's degree in Renewables Engineering Polytechnic School of Donostia-San Sebastian, UPV/EHU). Her PhD thesis - Biopolimeroetan oinarritutako filmen prestaketa, karakterizazioa eta bizi zikloaren analisia (Preparation, characterisation and life-cycle analysis of biopolymer-based films) - was supervised by Koro de la Caba (tenured university lecturer and head of the BIOMAT research group) and by the researcher Pedro Guerrero.

Bibliographical reference: Scientific publications: Quality attributes of map packaged ready-to-eat baby carrots following application of chitosan-based coatings (I. Leceta, S. Molinaro, P. Guerrero, J.P. Kerry, K. de la Caba), in the journal Postharvest biology and technology (no. 100, pages 142 to 150; 2015).


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