Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food Production

Microbial contamination management is a crucial task in the food industry. Undesirable microbial spoilage in a modern food processing plant poses a risk to consumers’ health, causing severe economic losses to the manufacturers and retailers, contributing to wastage of food and a concern to the world...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Catherine C. Adley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-08-01
Series:Foods
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/3/3/491
id doaj-54ded3d92d954b18821a2879b64a2d23
record_format Article
spelling doaj-54ded3d92d954b18821a2879b64a2d232020-11-24T20:48:23ZengMDPI AGFoods2304-81582014-08-013349151010.3390/foods3030491foods3030491Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food ProductionCatherine C. Adley0Microbiology Laboratory, Department of Chemical and Environmental Sciences, University of Limerick, Limerick, IrelandMicrobial contamination management is a crucial task in the food industry. Undesirable microbial spoilage in a modern food processing plant poses a risk to consumers’ health, causing severe economic losses to the manufacturers and retailers, contributing to wastage of food and a concern to the world’s food supply. The main goal of the quality management is to reduce the time interval between the filling and the detection of a microorganism before release, from several days, to minutes or, at most, hours. This would allow the food company to stop the production, limiting the damage to just a part of the entire batch, with considerable savings in terms of product value, thereby avoiding the utilization of raw materials, packaging and strongly reducing food waste. Sensor systems offer major advantages over current systems as they are versatile and affordable but need to be integrated in the existing processing systems as a process analytical control (PAT) tool. The desire for good selectivity, low cost, portable and usable at working sites, sufficiently rapid to be used at-line or on-line, and no sample preparation devices are required. The application of biosensors in the food industry still has to compete with the standard analytical techniques in terms of cost, performance and reliability.http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/3/3/491foodpathogensbiosensors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine C. Adley
spellingShingle Catherine C. Adley
Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food Production
Foods
food
pathogens
biosensors
author_facet Catherine C. Adley
author_sort Catherine C. Adley
title Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food Production
title_short Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food Production
title_full Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food Production
title_fullStr Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food Production
title_full_unstemmed Past, Present and Future of Sensors in Food Production
title_sort past, present and future of sensors in food production
publisher MDPI AG
series Foods
issn 2304-8158
publishDate 2014-08-01
description Microbial contamination management is a crucial task in the food industry. Undesirable microbial spoilage in a modern food processing plant poses a risk to consumers’ health, causing severe economic losses to the manufacturers and retailers, contributing to wastage of food and a concern to the world’s food supply. The main goal of the quality management is to reduce the time interval between the filling and the detection of a microorganism before release, from several days, to minutes or, at most, hours. This would allow the food company to stop the production, limiting the damage to just a part of the entire batch, with considerable savings in terms of product value, thereby avoiding the utilization of raw materials, packaging and strongly reducing food waste. Sensor systems offer major advantages over current systems as they are versatile and affordable but need to be integrated in the existing processing systems as a process analytical control (PAT) tool. The desire for good selectivity, low cost, portable and usable at working sites, sufficiently rapid to be used at-line or on-line, and no sample preparation devices are required. The application of biosensors in the food industry still has to compete with the standard analytical techniques in terms of cost, performance and reliability.
topic food
pathogens
biosensors
url http://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/3/3/491
work_keys_str_mv AT catherinecadley pastpresentandfutureofsensorsinfoodproduction
_version_ 1716807927883366400