Recent innovations in edible and/or biodegradable packaging materials

Food Addit Contam. 1997 Aug-Oct;14(6-7):741-51. doi: 10.1080/02652039709374585.

Abstract

Certain newly discovered characteristics of natural biopolymers should make them a choice material to be used for different types of wrappings and films. Edible and/or biodegradable packagings produced from agricultural origin macromolecules provide a supplementary and sometimes essential means to control physiological, microbiological, and physicochemical changes in food products. This is accomplished (i) by controlling mass transfers between food product and ambient atmosphere or between components in heterogeneous food product, and (iii) by modifying and controlling food surface conditions (pH, level of specific functional agents, slow release of flavour compounds), it should be stressed that the material characteristics (polysaccharide, protein, or lipid, plasticized or not, chemically modified or not, used alone or in combination) and the fabrication procedures (casting of a film-forming solution, thermoforming) must be adapted to each specific food product and usage condition (relative humidity, temperature). Some potential uses of these materials (e.g. wrapping of various fabricated foods; protection of fruits and vegetables by control of maturation; protection of meat and fish; control of internal moisture transfer in pizzas), which are hinged on film properties (e.g. organoleptic, mechanical, gas and solute barrier) are described with examples.

MeSH terms

  • Biodegradation, Environmental
  • Biopolymers
  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Food Packaging / trends*
  • Food Preservation
  • Oxygen
  • Permeability
  • Time Factors
  • Water

Substances

  • Biopolymers
  • Water
  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Oxygen