Background: hygienic and safe production is a high priority in the food industry. During processing, food may be subjected to bio-contamination. Accordingly, preservation of overall quality by keeping a clean environment is a goal to pursue. Among microbial vectors, air is considered a contributing factor to cross-contamination. Scope and approach: nowadays, in food plants emphasis is paid to the assessment of air bioload in view of prevention of recontamination. Normally, air entering a processing plant is chilled and filtered to remove un- desired microorganisms from outside. Nevertheless, apart from clean-room environments, uncontrolled factors (processes, personnel, structures, etc.) contribute to the release of microorganisms in indoor environments, re- sulting in generation of bioaerosols highly variable within and among plants, and on a daily basis within the same plant. Key findings and conclusions: this review focuses on the relevance of bioaerosol monitoring in the food industry, providing an update of air sampling techniques and methods of analysis in view to strengthen preventive hy- gienic actions. Disinfection procedures to minimize microbial counts in the air as additional safeguard to the standard chemical sanitation protocols are reviewed. Benefits and limitations of air treatment by chemical fogging, ozonation, uv irradiation or cold plasma are outlined. Air bioload monitoring and the implementation of subsequent air disinfection procedures are a feasible and a routinely exploitable strategy to satisfy hygienic requirements in food plants. Further research is required to face technical challenges and optimize the feasibility of some disinfection technologies for the real-world of food environments.
Airborne contamination in the food industry : An update on monitoring and disinfection techniques of air / F. Masotti, S. Cattaneo, M. Stuknytė, I. De Noni. - In: TRENDS IN FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0924-2244. - 90(2019 Aug), pp. 147-156. [10.1016/j.tifs.2019.06.006]
Airborne contamination in the food industry : An update on monitoring and disinfection techniques of air
F. Masotti
Primo
;S. CattaneoSecondo
;M. StuknytėPenultimo
;I. De NoniUltimo
2019
Abstract
Background: hygienic and safe production is a high priority in the food industry. During processing, food may be subjected to bio-contamination. Accordingly, preservation of overall quality by keeping a clean environment is a goal to pursue. Among microbial vectors, air is considered a contributing factor to cross-contamination. Scope and approach: nowadays, in food plants emphasis is paid to the assessment of air bioload in view of prevention of recontamination. Normally, air entering a processing plant is chilled and filtered to remove un- desired microorganisms from outside. Nevertheless, apart from clean-room environments, uncontrolled factors (processes, personnel, structures, etc.) contribute to the release of microorganisms in indoor environments, re- sulting in generation of bioaerosols highly variable within and among plants, and on a daily basis within the same plant. Key findings and conclusions: this review focuses on the relevance of bioaerosol monitoring in the food industry, providing an update of air sampling techniques and methods of analysis in view to strengthen preventive hy- gienic actions. Disinfection procedures to minimize microbial counts in the air as additional safeguard to the standard chemical sanitation protocols are reviewed. Benefits and limitations of air treatment by chemical fogging, ozonation, uv irradiation or cold plasma are outlined. Air bioload monitoring and the implementation of subsequent air disinfection procedures are a feasible and a routinely exploitable strategy to satisfy hygienic requirements in food plants. Further research is required to face technical challenges and optimize the feasibility of some disinfection technologies for the real-world of food environments.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
TIFS(2019)_Review_Airborn contamination_In press.pdf
Open Access dal 02/08/2020
Tipologia:
Post-print, accepted manuscript ecc. (versione accettata dall'editore)
Dimensione
1.03 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.03 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
1-s2.0-S0924224418308781-main.pdf
accesso riservato
Tipologia:
Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione
379.4 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
379.4 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.