6533b855fe1ef96bd12b0aac

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Electron spin resonance as a tool to monitor the influence of novel processing technologies on food properties

Francisco J. BarbaSze Ying LeongKenji IshikawaAlaa El-din A. BekhitShahin RoohinejadNikolai LebovkaJorge A. Saraiva

subject

Materials sciencedigestive oral and skin physiologyFree radicalsNanotechnologylaw.inventionlawElectron spin resonanceFruits and vegetablesFood systemsFood irradiationHigh pressure processingPulsed electric fieldsElectron paramagnetic resonanceNovel processing technologiesESRFood ScienceBiotechnologyPotential toxicity

description

Abstract Background Nowadays, electron spin resonance (ESR) is widely used as a powerful, non-destructive and very sensitive technique for the detection of free radicals in food systems. It can be applied for the direct identification of highly reactive oxygen species, organic and inorganic paramagnetic species and screening of food for potential toxicity. Its applications cover investigating food oxidative stability and properties of irradiated foods including fruits and vegetables, meats and fishes, spices, cereal grains, and oil seeds. Scope and approach This review aims at providing specialists in food science and industry with the fundamentals of ESR spectroscopy, typical radicals present in foods and their sources, ESR modalities, and detailed account for the use of the technology for evaluation of the physicochemical and nutritional properties of foods. Examples illustrating ESR applications for the evaluation of the effects of innovative and emerging technologies (ionizing radiation, high pressures, pulsed electric fields, cold plasma and ultrasonication) are discussed. Key findings and conclusions ESR can be used for the identification/quantification of free radicals in foods, for spin-label oximetry, estimation of free radical scavenging, food stability, and chelating activity, with particular interest for food processed using innovative technologies, with the main advantages of its high sensitivity, specificity, and low amounts of sample needed and nowadays many types of ESR instruments are commercially available. However, due to the different nature of foods, the development of novel ESR techniques and methods of analysis specially designed to study foods is of great interest in the future.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tifs.2020.03.032