ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

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Page 1: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables
Page 2: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Narendra Modi

Page 3: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables
Page 4: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables
Page 5: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Drawbacks of traditional fluid

preservation techniques

• Microbial spoilage

• Loss of heat sensitive nutrients and vitamins

• Fruit juice suspension

• Enzymatic discoloration

• Prolonged processing time 15 – 45 min.

• Added with additives and preservatives.

Page 6: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Ind

ian

Agr

icu

ltu

ral R

ese

arch

Inst

itu

te, N

ew D

elh

i

Division of Food science & Post Harvest Technology

Page 7: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Introduction

• Sonication is alternative technology to

replace conventional heat treatment

process.

• More energy efficient

• Less processing time

• Environment friendly

Page 8: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Sonication

Defined as inaudible sound waves at a frequency above 20 KHz.

Sound waves having

frequency more than 20

kHz are known as

ultrasounds /

Ultrasonication /

Sonication

(Dujmic et al., 2013)

Thermo-sonication – combination tretment of ultrasound and mild heat ( 50 °c – 60 ° c )

Manosonication - Combination with increase in pressure (< 600 Mpa)

(Lee et al., 2004)

Page 9: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Ultrasonic systems employed for fluid food processing

Page 10: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Experimental Setup

(1) ultrasound transducer (2) ultrasonic generator(3) ultrasound probe (19 mm)(4) data logger(5) temperature probe(6) Jacketed beaker(7) computer(8) water inlet(9) water outlet(h) depth of probe in thesample (25 mm).

Page 11: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Mechanism of Ultrasonication

1. Cavitation or Microbubbles

formation

2. Lethal effect on

Microorganisms

Page 12: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Cavitation

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Lethal effect on Microorganisms

Intracellular cavitation, thus enhancing the permeability and thinning of cell membranes (Soria & Villamiel, 2010).

control Heat Treatment at 40 °C for 3 min Sonication at 40 °C for 3 min

A)

Page 14: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Effect of US processing on physicochemical

properties of some fluid foods.

S.N Food Matrix

US treatments Major findings References

1 Mangojuice

40 kHz/130 W/15–60min/25 °C

Significant increase in carotenoids(4–9%), TPC (30–35%) for US-treated samples (15 and 30 min),compared to control.

Santhirasegaram et al.,(2013)

2 Guavajuice

35 kHz/20 °C/30 min Significant increase in Ascorbicacid (8%) compared to controlsamples.

Cheng et al.,(2007)

4 Apple juice 25 kHz/amplitude 70 μm/20 °C/60 min

Total plate count Yeast and molds 1.2 & 1.3 log reduction respectivly

Abid et al. (2014)

Page 15: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Case studies

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Ultrasonics Sonochemistry 21 (2014) 93-97

Muhammad abid et al.,

Page 17: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Objectives

• To evaluate the effects of sonication treatments onthe selected polyphenolic compounds, sugars, totalcarotenoids, total anthocyanins, essential minerals,viscosity and electrical conductivity of apple juice.

Materials and methods

• Fresh apple fruits (M. domestica cv. Fuji)• Electrical juice extractor

Treatment • 0 min ( fresh untreated apple juice)- control • 30 min• 60 min • Temp 20 °c• Frequency – 20 Khz and amplitude – 70 %

Page 18: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Effect of sonication treatement on polyphenolic compounds of apple juice (mg/L)

Polyphenolic compound

Control US treatment (30 min)

US treatment (60 min )

Chlorogenic acid 61.27 ± 0.07 C 85.82 ± 0.04 a 85. 55 ± 0.09 b

Caffeic acid 3.08 ± 0.06 b 3.66 ± 0.09 a 3.66 ± 0.07 a

Catechin 14.69 ± 0.04 c 17.58 ± 0.07 a 17.15 ± 0.06 b

Epicatechin 13.49 ± 0.09 c 33.05 ± 0.12 a 31.27 ± 0.08 b

Phloridzin 1.88 ± 0.07 b 3.31 ± 0.06 a 3.32 ± 0.05 aIncreased conc due to disruption of cells leads liberation of Phenols & attachment of OH molecules to the aromatic phenol rings

Page 19: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Effect of sonication treatments on sucrose, glucose and fructose of apple juice (g/L)

Ultrasound treatment breaks the cells which leads to diffusion of sugars from intracellular spaces into liquid

Page 20: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Effect of sonication on total carotenoids, total anthocyanins,viscosity and electrical conductivity of apple juice

Mechanical Disruption of cell walls may enhance the carotenoids in the juice & increased viscosity is due to disruption of macromolecules creates colloidal solution which makes increase in viscosity

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

Totalcarotenoids

(µg/mL)

TotalAnthocyanin

(mg/L)

Viscosity (cP) EC (ms/cm)

Control US 30 US60

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Effect of sonication treatment on mineral elements of apple juice (mg/L)

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Inference

1. Significant increase in phenolic compounds and sugars occurs when juice is sonicated for 30 min.

2. Total carotenoid , mineral element & viscosity increased significantly at 60 min.

3. There is no effect of sonication on improving the total anthocyanin, Zn & electrical conductivity.

Page 23: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Adekunte A.O et al., 2010 Food Chemistry 122: 500–507

Page 24: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Objective To investigate the efficacy of sonication for yeastinactivation in tomato juice and to model changes inselected quality and nutritional parameters as a function ofamplitude level and treatment time.

Materials and methods

• Fresh tomatoes• stored at 3 ± 1 °c

Treatment • Samples - 80 ml• Frequency 20 kHz• Amplitude 24.4–61 µm• Time 2–10 min

Page 25: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Effect of sonication on the quality parameters of tomato juice at a treatment time of 10 min.

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Inference

• No significant differences in pH, Brix or TA were observed in sonicated samples.

• Sonication has a significant effect on juice colour, ascorbic acid content and yeast inactivation.

• A 5 log reduction was achieved in 7.5 min at an amplitude of 61 µm.

Page 27: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables
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AIM: Combining ultrasound and UV light techniquesInvestigating the effect on quality attributes and compare theresults with conventional thermal processing.

Treatment conditions: 5 log microbial reduction for all processedjuices.

Objective:To obtain a processed food without any offensive odor and colordevelopment during storage and Retaining all important bio-components in the food

A study into the optimization of ultrasound based processing forachieving the desired log reduction as per the FDA guidelines hasalso been presented.

Page 29: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Material

Filtered juice ofFruits - oranges and sweet lime vegetables - carrots and spinach Stored at 4o C

Treatments

• Pasteurization: 80oC/ 10 min• Ulrasonication: 20kHz/ 15 min (<30oC), 100 W • UV: alone could not give 5 log reduction uptil 30 min (not

covered)• UV+ US: 100 W/ 15 min + UV lamps 8W (2 nos.)

• Scale up:Ultrasonic reactor (5L); Power: 150W, 36 kHz; UV lamps 8W (2 nos.)

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Ascorbic acid

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TOTAL PHENOLICS

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Max content observed only in US treatment

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Antioxidant activity (DPPH)

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Other studies

• Sugars anslysis

• Scale up (5L)

Microbial growth (preliminary)

• pH played a decisive role (prod. of OH- radicals)

• Untreated : inc. upto 109 cfu/mL

• Thermally pasterurized: no growth

• UV+US: significantly slow growth

Page 36: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Inference • Microbial content: no significant difference

b/w thermal and no-thermal t3

• Excellent nutritional quality can be attainedwith use of US compared to thermal t3

• US juices were a par with fresh juice

• Considering taste, goodness and health, US isthe best option for fruit juice processing.

Page 37: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Future trust

• Optimization by changing time, frequency, temperature for individual fruits and vegetable juices

• Understanding the effect of US on enzymes, juice yield and microbial growth retardation

• Studies on combined use of US with other treatments

Page 38: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables
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Muhammad Aadil et al., 2013

Page 41: Ultrasonication processing of fruits and vegetables

Effect of ultrasound on pH, TSS (Brix), EC, acidity, colour values & non-enzymatic browning of grapefruit juice.

Objective

Material

• Fresh grapefruits• Domestic juice extractor

Treatments

• Control (0 min)• Time 30, 60 and 90 min.• Frequency - 28 kHz• Temperature – 20o C

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Effect of sonication on Brix, pH, titratable acidity, cloud value in grapefruit juice (n = 3).

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Effect of sonication on EC, colour and non enzymatic browning in grapefruit juice (n = 3).

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Effect of sonication on ascorbic acid, total phenols, flavonoids in grapefruit juice (n = 3).

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Effect of sonication on flavonols in grapefruit juice (n =3).

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Inference

• No significant differences in pH, acidity and Brix level.

• Significant increases in EC were observed after ultrasound treatments.

• Small differences in colour were also observed but overall quality of grapefruit juice was improved.