Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Potentialities and Limits of Some Non-thermal Technologies to Improve Sustainability of Food Processing
In the whole food production chain, from the farm to the fork, food manufacturing steps have a large environmental impact. Despite significant efforts made to optimize heat recovery or water consumption, conventional food processing remains poorly efficient in terms of energy requirements and waste management. Therefore, in the few last decades, much research has focused on the development of alternative non-thermal technologies. Some of them, such as membrane separation processes, hydrostatic or dynamic high pressure, dense phase or high-pressure carbon dioxide, and pulsed electric fields (PEFs) have been extensively studied for cold pasteurization, concentration, extraction, or food functionalization. However, it is still difficult to evaluate the actual advantages or limits of these innovative processing technologies to replace conventional processes. Thus, the overall aim of this paper is to present an overview of the most relevant studies dealing with the potentialities and limits of these non-thermal technologies to improve sustainability of food processing. After a brief presentation of the physical principles of these technologies, the paper illustrates how these technologies could play a decisive role for sustainable food preservation or valorization of raw materials and by-products.
Potentialities and Limits of Some Non-thermal Technologies to Improve Sustainability of Food Processing
In the whole food production chain, from the farm to the fork, food manufacturing steps have a large environmental impact. Despite significant efforts made to optimize heat recovery or water consumption, conventional food processing remains poorly efficient in terms of energy requirements and waste management. Therefore, in the few last decades, much research has focused on the development of alternative non-thermal technologies. Some of them, such as membrane separation processes, hydrostatic or dynamic high pressure, dense phase or high-pressure carbon dioxide, and pulsed electric fields (PEFs) have been extensively studied for cold pasteurization, concentration, extraction, or food functionalization. However, it is still difficult to evaluate the actual advantages or limits of these innovative processing technologies to replace conventional processes. Thus, the overall aim of this paper is to present an overview of the most relevant studies dealing with the potentialities and limits of these non-thermal technologies to improve sustainability of food processing. After a brief presentation of the physical principles of these technologies, the paper illustrates how these technologies could play a decisive role for sustainable food preservation or valorization of raw materials and by-products.
Potentialities and Limits of Some Non-thermal Technologies to Improve Sustainability of Food Processing
Picart-Palmade, Laetitia (Autor:in) / Cunault, Charles (Autor:in) / Chevalier-Lucia, Dominique (Autor:in) / Belleville, Marie-Pierre (Autor:in) / Marchesseau, Sylvie (Autor:in)
01.01.2019
Frontiers in Nutrition (5), . (2019)
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
DDC:
690
Potentialities of lightweight construction solutions for sustainability
BASE | 2005
|Challenges and Potentialities of Sustainability in the Institutional Food Market of Family Farming
DOAJ | 2023
|Creative, embodied practices, and the potentialities for sustainability transformations
BASE | 2021
|Creative, embodied practices, and the potentialities for sustainability transformations
Springer Verlag | 2022
|Creative, embodied practices, and the potentialities for sustainability transformations
BASE | 2021
|