What's New Unreplied Topics Membership About Us Contact Us Privacy Policy
[Ad]

Researchers to Develop Self-Sanitizing Surfaces

Started by , Mar 17 2011 06:38 AM
3 Replies
Source: http://www.foodquali...g_Surfaces.html

From: The eUpdate, 3.15.2011

Researchers to Develop Self-Sanitizing Surfaces

Scientists at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst have recently received a four-year, $488,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI) to create a “self-sanitizing” top layer for food processing surfaces such as counters and conveyors. A team led by Julie Goddard, PhD, assistant professor of food science at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, reported that halamine-infused surfaces could achieve a 5-log reduction for a number of organisms relevant to food quality, including Listeria and E. coli. “When you modify the surface of food processing materials, like some plastics and stainless steels, you can introduce halamine into just the surface layer,” Dr. Goddard said in an interview with Food Quality. “Halamine complexes chlorine very strongly, so every time you rinse the surface with bleach, it recharges the layer’s existing antimicrobial power. “
Share this Topic
Topics you might be interested in
Researchers Uncover Molecule Keeps Pathogens Like Salmonella in Check
[Ad]
Hi Zeeshan,

There has been work conducted on Bacterial Activities of selected organic N - Halamines back in 1987. Halamines are not accepted in many countries.

I hope the following article is of interest to you.

http://www.foodtechs...g/009/trend.htm

Regards

Ajay
1 Thank
It sounds as a good solution for the surfaces that are not in direct contact with food. ( (hard to reach equipment areas where Listeria is hiding)
Dear Ajay, I can't see where it's stated that halamines are forbidden
why they're more dangerous than other chlorine disinfectants used for disinfection in food industry?
Interesting.
I used to work in non-stick / anti-microbial coatings for medical devices and with that in mind I wonder if technologies such as silver impregnated surfaces could be (have been) considered in the food area? I also know of a company that was mimicking the pattern of shark skin as a microscopic texture that reduced adhesion of proteins and cells (that's why sharks don't get barnacles - apparently...!).

Similar Discussion Topics
Researchers Uncover Molecule Keeps Pathogens Like Salmonella in Check