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Journal ArticleDOI

3D printing of meat.

01 Jul 2019-Meat Science (Elsevier)-Vol. 153, pp 35-44
TL;DR: A temperature-controlled extruder-type 3D printer built with multi-head system is suggested to suit the required conditions for meat safety and rheological requirements and the elemental aspects affecting the printability and post-processing feasibility of 3D printed meat products.
About: This article is published in Meat Science.The article was published on 2019-07-01 and is currently open access. It has received 136 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Meat packing industry.

Summary (4 min read)

Introduction

  • AC C EP TE D M AN U SC R IP T 1 Three-dimensional printing (3DP) process stands as a developing technology for food manufacturing, which offers the opportunity to design novel food products with improved nutritional value and sensorial profile.
  • This review analyses the potential applications of 3DP technology for meat processing and the elemental aspects affecting the printability and postprocessing feasibility of 3D printed meat products.
  • The combination of nutritionally balanced ingredients and novel internal structures may be schemed into a multi-material 3D model that meets special individual needs, such as chewing and swallowing difficulties.
  • Furthermore, a temperature-controlled extruder-type 3D printer built with multi-head system is suggested to suit the required conditions for meat safety and rheological requirements.

Contents

  • 17 Introduction 1. Only 7.2% in weight of a cattle carcase accounts for cuts that are considered suitable for high-value steaks (Conroy, Drennan, Kenny, & McGee, 2010).
  • Based on the additive manufacturing (AM) process, which consists of a layer-by-layer deposition with predetermined thickness to create complex freeform structures (Noorani, 2017), 3DP offers the possibility of manufacturing novel food products with digitalized intricate shapes, inexperienced textures and higher nutritional value, through the combination of different food ingredients and printing methodologies.
  • The printability of any food material refers to its ability to be handled and dispensed by a 3D printer into a freeform structure after deposition (Godoi et al., 2016), and is affected by the printing conditions and the rheological properties of the materials (Kim, Bae, & Park, 2017).
  • Likewise, Liu et al. (2018a) were able to 3D print chicken, pork and fish in a slurry form with the addition of gelatine solution.

3D Printing process 2.

  • Three-dimensional printing, also known as additive manufacturing (AM), is a process that generates freeform structures by introducing a prototype into a computer aided design (CAD) software, which is then converted into a .STL file by a slicing software to be recognised and processed by 3D printers (Noorani, 2017).
  • The technology involves a layer-by-layer ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT AC C EP TE D M AN U SC R IP T 6 deposition with predetermined thickness to create complex three-dimensional objects from different materials used as “inks”, using strictly the necessary amount of material to consolidate the shape of the printed object.
  • 3DP offers an alternative technology with sustainability benefits such as reduced demand of raw materials, workforce, energy and transportation (Peng, 2016; Sher & Tutó, 2015).
  • Besides waste conversion through the added-value chain, the development of health and well-being products, as well as novel food interactions may be triggered.
  • Some of these aspects, as reported in the literature, include but are not limited to the printing machines, methodologies, prototype design and software, food ingredients and additives, processing parameters, and post-processing suitability (Liu, Zhang, Bhandari, & Wang, 2017) applied to each 3D printed food manufacturing process.

2.1 Current application of 3DP in food products

  • In the last decade, 3DP technology for food products has increasingly developed through its application to a wide range of food materials.
  • Nonetheless, few studies (Lipton et al., 2010; Lipton, Cutler, Nigl, Cohen, & Lipson, 2015; Severini et al., 2016a) have taken into account the post-processing feasibility of the 3D construct for materials such as dough or meat, which require further heat treatment; for instance, its ability to withstand cooking operations without losing the 3D intricate design due to cooking loss/shrinkage.
  • In general, there is still an extensive field for research regarding the application of this technology for a broad range of foodstuffs with varying formulations.

2.2 3D Printing of meat

  • To date, only a small number of studies account for the printability of fibrous-meat materials, through the assessment of the rheological properties of the meat “ink”, as well as the postdeposition and post-processing properties of the printed object.
  • Also, the same slurry was used to print a cube containing celery fluid gel inside.
  • Such introductory results in 3D meat printing show how this technology can further generate meat products with complex internal structure, containing on-demand functional ingredients and modified textures for enhanced eating experiences.
  • Recently the printability of fish surimi gel was assessed by Wang et al. (2018) using a screw-conveyor extruder type 3D printer.
  • Furthermore, the authors evaluated the effect of printer settings on the geometrical precision and dimension of the deposited structures, although no objective comparison was performed among printed structures, such as the post-deposition and postprocessing properties.

2.3 3D Food printers and printing parameters

  • The basic components of a 3D food printer stage include a motor-driven print-head and a platform, commonly attached to a stage with Cartesian configuration (Sun, Zhou, Yan, Huang, & Lin, 2018).
  • Based on the 3D printing methodology built into the 3D printer, the print-head and platform characteristics may vary.
  • Some previous studies on meat and seafood printing focused on the extrusion and printing process (Kouzani et al., 2017; Liu et al., 2018a), post-deposition and post-processing conditions (Lipton et al., 2010), rheological and mechanical properties of the material (Wang et al., 2018), regardless of safety concerns during printing due to the printer’s limitations.
  • When a printer is not attached with cooling system, the suitability of the technology for the processing of highly perishable materials like meat is dependent on the initial meat paste temperature and the period of time that the meat paste remains in the cartridge or platform at ambient temperature.

2.4 Printing conditions to enable 3D printing of meat

  • Several studies demonstrate the effect of varying printing processing parameters on the printability of food materials and hence, the quality of the final printed objects.
  • Similarly, an optimal nozzle height determines the accuracy and dimensions of the printed meat product, and it is suggested to be equivalent to the dimension of the nozzle diameter.
  • If the nozzle speed is too high, a thinner stream of meat paste is obtained and dragged, preventing the subsequent binding of layers and producing inaccuracies in the final product since voids remain within the cross-section area, and under deposition may occur.
  • Similarly, varying infill percentages will affect the total amount of deposited material in the internal part of the printed structure, affecting the void fraction within the final 3D printed meat product and thus the post-processing conditions.
  • The void fraction would determine the cooking conditions for a specific degree of doneness since as more porosity remains within the structure, less heat transfer occurs during cooking, affecting the moisture and fat releases and thus the texture of the cooked meat product.

2.5 Design development

  • The in-software design for a determined 3D printed meat product sculpts its nutritional and sensorial profile.
  • Even though the rheology of the meat paste may represent a challenge when reproducing such complex patterns, these approaches could provide food consumers with both on-demand nutrition and novel eating experiences.
  • As an example, three hypothetical designs (Autodesk, Inc.), such as sausage, steak and beef patty are shown in Figure 8.
  • Recombined meats, such as steaks can be 3D printed as a multi-material model from soft meat paste, fat slurry and other food ingredients to approximate the flavours and nutrients of a beefsteak.
  • The model is sliced into 2D cross-sectional layers, according to the required design and printing settings (Noorani, 2017).

2.6 3D Printing methodologies suitable for meat materials

  • A variety of 3DP methods has been used for food printing, such as extrusion, inkjet printing, binding deposition, and bioprinting (Godoi et al., 2016), which are commonly applied to paste-like materials, liquid-based foods, powder-based foods, and cultured cells, respectively.
  • 3D printing of meat products consists of building the desired geometry from a slurry material, which requires controlled temperature below 4 °C, calling for liquid-based methodologies, such as extrusion and/or inkjet printing.
  • Among the available extrusion mechanisms (syringe-based, air pressure-driven and screw-based extrusion), air pressure driven extrusion is not recommended for viscous paste materials due to their ease of attaching to the walls of the cartridge (Sun et al., 2018), and thus is not endorsed for 3D printing of meat paste.
  • After fusion, the agarose structure is removed and the tissue is subjected to low-frequency stimulation in a bioreactor to maturate meat fibres (Sher et al., 2015).
  • First, as a fibrous material, the raw meat needs to be finely comminute into a paste form with controlled particle size to enable the extrusion through the nozzle of mm to micron size.

3.1 Potential viscosity enhancers and binders for printable meat paste

  • The viscosity of the paste has to be low enough to flow easily through the nozzle and high enough to maintain the deposited shape (Godoi et al., 2016), and further support the subsequent layers on top.
  • To improve the mechanical stability of the paste upon deposition, heat- and cold- set binders are available based on the temperature required for the occurrence of the binding mechanisms that are described below.
  • Furthermore, the addition of salts and phosphates is recommended to aid the extraction of salt soluble proteins, such as myofribrillar and some sarcoplasmic (Boles, 2011), and thus increase the binding matrix.
  • In general, the addition of different food hydrocolloids to the meat paste can provide modified rheological and mechanical properties through varying binding mechanisms, enhancing its printability and post-processing viability.
  • Very few studies refer to the printability of fibrous meat materials, such as pork, turkey, chicken and fish, while no data is available for beef meat.

Declarations of interest 6.

  • This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
  • Meat Products Handbook - Practical Science and Technology: Woodhead Publishing.
  • 3D printing technologies applied for food design: status and prospects.

Highlights

  • Multi-material 3D printing allows the production of recombined meats.
  • The design of appetizing soft-meat products is viable with 3D printing technology.
  • Low temperature-3D printers are needed to process meat products safely.
  • The application of heat- and cold-set binders enhances the meat paste rheology.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the use of zein, the primary constitutive protein in maize seeds, as a 3D printable material was explored as a bioprinting material.
Abstract: The use of three-dimensional (3D) printing for biomedical applications has expanded exponentially in recent years. However, the current portfolio of 3D printable inks is still limited. For instance, only few protein matrices have been explored as printing/bioprinting materials. Here, we introduce the use of zein, the primary constitutive protein in maize seeds, as a 3D printable material. Zein-based inks were prepared by dissolving commercial zein powder in ethanol with or without polyethylene glycol (PEG400) as a plasticizer. The rheological characteristics of our materials, studied during 21 days of aging/maturation, showed an increase in the apparent viscosity as a function of time in all formulations. The addition of PEG400 decreased the apparent viscosity. Inks with and without PEG400 and at different maturation times were tested for printability in a BioX bioprinter. We optimized the 3D printing parameters for each ink formulation in terms of extrusion pressure and linear printing velocity. Higher fidelity structures were obtained with inks that had maturation times of 10 to 14 days. We present different proof-of-concept experiments to demonstrate the versatility of the engineered zein inks for diverse biomedical applications. These include printing of complex and/or free-standing 3D structures, tablets for controlled drug release, and scaffolds for cell culture.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 2022
TL;DR: In this article , the finite element method (FEM) was used to analyze the flow behavior in 3D printing (3DP) of surimi pastes, and additive layer manufacturing (ALM) simulation was employed to analyze residual stress during and after 3DP.
Abstract: In this research, the finite element method (FEM) was used to analyze the flow behavior in 3D printing (3DP) of surimi pastes. Additive layer manufacturing (ALM) simulation was used to analyze residual stress during and after 3DP. Rheological studies showed that the surimi paste with 82% moisture was suitable for 3DP. The FEM model revealed that a decrease in nozzle diameter (1.2–0.6 mm) increased die swell (9.8–14.1%). The rise in the swell ratio was due to an increase of pressure gradient at the nozzle exit (1.15 × 107Pa to 7.80 × 107Pa). FEM simulation indicated that the nozzle diameter influenced fluid properties (pressure, velocity, and shear rate) in the flow field as well as residual stress and deformation of the printed sample. The development and production of food with 3-dimensional printing (3DP) technology has the potential to create and produce customized food in a more advanced format that will be a new paradigm shift in the food industry. To reach the full potential of this promising technology, methods for evaluating and predicting production outcomes must be identified. This study provides an insight into the use of the finite element method (FEM) for the prediction of printability and the deposition process of surimi paste. This method can be applied to other foods during 3DP.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the effects of transglutaminase (TGase) on rheological property, three-dimensional (3D) printing property, textural property, water holding capacity, water distribution and secondary structures of sheep plasma protein-surimi gels were investigated.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2022
TL;DR: In this article , the chicken 3D printing was optimized using response surface methodology (RSM) and genetic algorithm (GA), and the best 3D print forming accuracy was obtained under 1.3 mm nozzle diameter, 9.8 mm filament diameter, 28.0 °C nozzle temperature, and 2.5% NaCl addition.
Abstract: Process parameters of chicken 3D printing were optimized using response surface methodology (RSM) and genetic algorithm (GA), and the best 3D printing forming accuracy was obtained under 1.3 mm nozzle diameter, 9.8 mm filament diameter, 28.0 °C nozzle temperature, and 2.5% NaCl addition. The results of rheology and gel strength showed that NaCl-treated chicken paste had shear-thinning behavior and sufficient gel strength (>99.85 g mm), indicating that the chicken paste reached the balance between extruding smoothly from the nozzle and supporting the structure after deposition. On the other hand, the cooking feasibility of 3D-printed (3DP) product was explored by comparing with the mold-shaped (MS) product. Under the optimized condition, the cooked 3DP samples had similar texture characteristics with the MS samples, but showed more severe cooking loss. The nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) results showed that due to the shear effect of 3D printing, water in the chicken gel gradually transformed to free water and was lost, leading to the relative concentration of protein. As a result, a more tight and uniform gel network structure was formed after cooking. In summary, the product using resulting optimum condition had good geometry and certain cooking feasibility.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Jun 2021-Foods
TL;DR: The role of 3D bioprinting meat analogues enables a better nutritional profile and sensorial values, and the integration of nanosensors in the bioprocess of culture meat eased the quality assessment throughout the food supply chain and management as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Due to a proportionally increasing population and food demands, the food industry has come up with wide innovations, opportunities, and possibilities to manufacture meat under in vitro conditions. The amalgamation of cell culture and tissue engineering has been the base idea for the development of the synthetic meat, and this has been proposed to be a pivotal study for a futuristic muscle development program in the medical field. With improved microbial and chemical advancements, in vitro meat matched the conventional meat and is proposed to be eco-friendly, healthy, nutrient rich, and ethical. Despite the success, there are several challenges associated with the utilization of materials in synthetic meat manufacture, which demands regulatory and safety assessment systems to manage the risks associated with the production of cultured meat. The role of 3D bioprinting meat analogues enables a better nutritional profile and sensorial values. The integration of nanosensors in the bioprocess of culture meat eased the quality assessment throughout the food supply chain and management. Multidisciplinary approaches such as mathematical modelling, computer fluid dynamics, and biophotonics coupled with tissue engineering will be promising aspects to envisage the future prospective of this technology and make it available to the public at economically feasible rates.

12 citations

References
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TL;DR: The history of 3D printing is encompassed, various printing methods are reviewed, current applications are presented, and the future direction and impact this technology will have on laboratory settings as 3D printers become more accessible is offered.
Abstract: Nearing 30 years since its introduction, 3D printing technology is set to revolutionize research and teaching laboratories. This feature encompasses the history of 3D printing, reviews various printing methods, and presents current applications. The authors offer an appraisal of the future direction and impact this technology will have on laboratory settings as 3D printers become more accessible.

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the use of 3D printing techniques to design food materials and bring a new insight into how essential food material properties behave during application of additive manufacturing techniques.

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TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper collected and analyzed the information on how to achieve a precise and accurate food printing, and reviewed the application of 3D printing in several food areas, as well as give some proposals and provide a critical insight into the trends and challenges to 3D food printing.
Abstract: Background Three dimensional (3D) food printing is being widely investigated in food sector recent years due to its multiple advantages such as customized food designs, personalized nutrition, simplifying supply chain, and broadening of the available food material. Scope and approach Currently, 3D printing is being applied in food areas such as military and space food, elderly food, sweets food. An accurate and precise printing is critical to a successful and smooth printing. In this paper, we collect and analyze the information on how to achieve a precise and accurate food printing, and review the application of 3D printing in several food areas, as well as give some proposals and provide a critical insight into the trends and challenges to 3D food printing. Key findings and conclusions To realize an accurate and precise printing, three main aspects should be investigated considerably: material properties, process parameters, and post-processing methods. We emphasize that the factors below should be given special attention to achieve a successful printing: rheological properties, binding mechanisms, thermodynamic properties, pre-treatment and post-processing methods. In addition, there are three challenges on 3D food printing: 1) printing precision and accuracy 2) process productivity and 3) production of colorful, multi-flavor, multi-structure products. A broad application of this technique is expected once these challenges are addressed.

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TL;DR: In this article, the applicability of extrusion-based 3D printing technology for food pastes made of protein, starch and fiber-rich materials was assessed, as a starting point in the development of healthy, customized snack products.

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TL;DR: 3D food printing provides an engineering solution for customized food design and personalized nutrition control, a prototyping tool to facilitate new food product development, and a potential machine to reconfigure a customized food supply chain.
Abstract: Different from robotics-based food manufacturing, three-dimensional (3D) food printing integrates 3D printing and digital gastronomy to revolutionize food manufacturing with customized shape, color, flavor, texture, and even nutrition. Hence, food products can be designed and fabricated to meet individual needs through controlling the amount of printing material and nutrition content. The objectives of this study are to collate, analyze, categorize, and summarize published articles and papers pertaining to 3D food printing and its impact on food processing, as well as to provide a critical insight into the direction of its future development. From the available references, both universal platforms and self-developed platforms are utilized for food printing. These platforms could be reconstructed in terms of process reformulation, material processing, and user interface in the near future. Three types of printing materials (i.e., natively printable materials, non-printable traditional food materials, and alternative ingredients) and two types of recipes (i.e., element-based recipe and traditional recipe) have been used for customized food fabrication. The available 3D food printing technologies and food processing technologies potentially applicable to food printing are presented. Essentially, 3D food printing provides an engineering solution for customized food design and personalized nutrition control, a prototyping tool to facilitate new food product development, and a potential machine to reconfigure a customized food supply chain.

338 citations