A wide family of cellulose-based additives are authorized worldwide as fillers and thickening agents in foods, pills and tablets, and microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) is, among these, the most important one. Since MCC manufacturing is similar to the main production route of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs), it is reasonable to wonder whether the MCC would contain CNCs as minor components. In this Short Communications we provide first results about the occurrence of CNCs in MCC, observed by dynamic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy after serial filtrations of MCC suspensions. The incidence of cellulose nanoparticles has been proved in several different trials in our ongoing works on diverse MCC samples and the nanoparticles isolated showed shape and dimensions similar to those commonly produced by acidic hydrolysis at laboratory level. Therefore, the presence of CNCs in many products is considered as a certainty. The foods and the pharmaceuticals we have been consuming so far, do indeed contain traces of CNCs to such an extent that this wide presence in consumed products should be taken into account when considering possible limitations of the use of these nanoparticles in food contact materials manufacture.
Are Cellulose nanocrystals ‘alien particles’ to human experience? / L. Piergiovanni, G. Fotie, A. Luana, B. Akgun, S. Limbo. - In: PACKAGING TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE. - ISSN 1099-1522. - (2019). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1002/pts.2477]
Are Cellulose nanocrystals ‘alien particles’ to human experience?
L. Piergiovanni
Primo
;G. FotieSecondo
;B. AkgunPenultimo
;S. LimboUltimo
2019
Abstract
A wide family of cellulose-based additives are authorized worldwide as fillers and thickening agents in foods, pills and tablets, and microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) is, among these, the most important one. Since MCC manufacturing is similar to the main production route of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs), it is reasonable to wonder whether the MCC would contain CNCs as minor components. In this Short Communications we provide first results about the occurrence of CNCs in MCC, observed by dynamic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy after serial filtrations of MCC suspensions. The incidence of cellulose nanoparticles has been proved in several different trials in our ongoing works on diverse MCC samples and the nanoparticles isolated showed shape and dimensions similar to those commonly produced by acidic hydrolysis at laboratory level. Therefore, the presence of CNCs in many products is considered as a certainty. The foods and the pharmaceuticals we have been consuming so far, do indeed contain traces of CNCs to such an extent that this wide presence in consumed products should be taken into account when considering possible limitations of the use of these nanoparticles in food contact materials manufacture.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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