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Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of temperature on lethality and energy efficiency of apple juice pasteurization by pulsed electric fields treatment

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TLDR
In this article, the authors focused on improving energy efficiency of this process for pasteurization of apple juice inoculated with Escherichia coli by investigating the relation between achieved reduction in survivor count and electric field strength and treatment temperature.
Abstract
The applicability of pulsed electric fields as a non-thermal preservation process for liquid food decontamination has been shown in several studies. However, high costs of operation due to the occurrence of a high amount of dissipated electrical energy inhibited an industrial exploitation so far. In this study the focus was put on improving energy efficiency of this process for pasteurization of apple juice inoculated with Escherichia coli by investigating the relation between achieved reduction in survivor count and electric field strength and treatment temperature. An empirical mathematical model was derived to predict the required input of electrical energy for a given inactivation. Using synergistic effects of elevated treatment temperature of 35–65 °C on microbial inactivation the energy consumption could be reduced from above 100 to less than 40 kJ kg−1 for a reduction of 6 log cycles and the need to preheat the juice before treatment provided a possibility to recover the dissipated electrical energy after treatment, leading to a drastic reduction in operation costs. To evaluate the thermal load of the product the pasteurization unit (PU) and the cook value, key benchmarks for the thermal load, were used to compare PEF and conventional heat treatment.

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Citations
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Techniques for extraction of bioactive compounds from plant materials: A review

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Fruit and Vegetable Waste: Bioactive Compounds, Their Extraction, and Possible Utilization.

TL;DR: The types and nature of the waste that originates from fruits and vegetables, the bioactive components in the waste, their extraction techniques, and the potential utilization of the obtained bioactive compounds are described.
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Environmental impact of novel thermal and non-thermal technologies in food processing

TL;DR: The aim of this review is to discuss the environmental impact that some of the most promising novel food preservation technologies may represent in terms of energy efficiency, water savings and reduced emissions.
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Review: potential of high hydrostatic pressure and pulsed electric fields for energy efficient and environmentally friendly food processing

TL;DR: The application of emerging, novel processing techniques such as high hydrostatic pressure or pulsed electric fields can be utilized to replace, enhance or modify conventional techniques of food production as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

High intensity pulsed electric fields applied for food preservation

TL;DR: In this article, the crucial process parameters electrical field strength, total pulse energy input and treatment temperature were investigated experimentally, and it was found that temperatures higher than 40°C can strongly increase the lethality of the PEF process.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dielectric Breakdown of Cell Membranes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a Coulter Counter with a hydrodynamic focusing orifice to measure the dielectric breakdown of human and bovine red blood cells in a homogeneous electric field between two flat platinum electrodes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Killing of microorganisms by pulsed electric fields

TL;DR: PEF treatment is an excellent process for inactivation of microorganisms in acid and in thermosensive media, but not for complete disintegration of microbial cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical breakdown of bimolecular lipid membranes as an electromechanical instability.

TL;DR: The bimolecular lipid membrane is modeled as a bulk elastic layer subject to a compressive electric force caused by applied voltages that tends to crush the film and thus rupture it and the predicted breakdown voltage shows fair agreement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of high field electric pulses on the activity of selected enzymes

TL;DR: In this article, a low-cost bench-top, pulsed electric field treatment system was designed and developed, which consisted of a high-voltage pulse generator (≤ 30 kV) and a treatment chamber with ≤ 148 ml capacity.
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