viernes, 8 de octubre de 2010

Tests of potential functional barriers for laminated multilayer food packages. Part I: Low molecular weight permeants.

The advent of the functional barrier concept in food packaging has brought with it a requirement for fast tests of permeation through potential barrier materials. In such tests it would be convenient for both foodstuffs and materials below the functional barrier (sub-barrier materials) to be represented by standard simulants. By means of inverse gas chromatography, liquid paraffin spiked with appropriate permeants was considered as a potential simulant of sub-barrier materials based on polypropylene (PP) or similar polyolefins. Experiments were performed to characterize the kinetics of the permeation of low molecular weight model permeants (octene, toluene and isopropanol) from liquid paraffin, through a surrogate potential functional barrier (25 mu m-thick oriented PP) into the food simulants olive oil and 3% (w/v) acetic acid. These permeation results were interpreted in terms of three permeation kinetic models regarding the solubility of a particular model permeant in the post-barrier medium (i.e. the food simulant).

Simal-Gandara, J., Sarria-Vidal, M., Koorevaar, A., & Rijk, R. (2000). Tests of potential functional barriers for laminated multilayer food packages. Part I: Low molecular weight permeants. Food Additives & Contaminants, 17(8), 703-711. doi:10.1080/02652030050083222.

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