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Effect of atmospheric pressure plasma on inactivation of pathogens inoculated onto bacon using two different gas compositions

Cited 182 time in Web of Science Cited 214 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Binna; Yun, Hyejeong; Jung, Samooel; Jung, Yeonkook; Jung, Heesoo; Choe, Wonho; Jo, Cheorun

Issue Date
2011-02
Publisher
Academic Press
Citation
Food Microbiology, Vol.28 No.1, pp.9-13
Abstract
Atmospheric pressure plasma (APP) is an emerging non-thermal pasteurization method for the enhancement of food safety. In this study, the effect of APP on the inactivation of pathogens inoculated onto bacon was observed. Sliced bacon was inoculated with Listeria monocytogenes (KCTC 3596), Escherichia coli (KCTC 1682), and Salmonella Typhimurium (KCTC 1925). The samples were treated with APP at 75, 100, and 125W of input power for 60 and 90s. Two gases, helium (10 lpm) or a mixture of helium and oxygen, (10 lpm and 10 sccm, respectively) were used for the plasma generation. Plasma with helium could only reduce the number of inoculated pathogens by about 1-2 Log cycles. On the other hand, the helium/oxygen gas mixture was able to achieve microbial reduction of about 2-3 Log cycles. The number of total aerobic bacteria showed 1.89 and 4.58 decimal reductions after plasma treatment with helium and the helium/oxygen mixture, respectively. Microscopic observation of the bacon after plasma treatment did not find any significant changes, except that the L*-value of the bacon surface was increased. These results clearly indicate that APP treatment is effective for the inactivation of the three pathogens used in this study, although further investigation is needed for elucidating quality changes after treatment. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
ISSN
0740-0020
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/208034
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2010.07.022
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  • College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
  • Department of Agricultural Biotechnology
Research Area Analysis, evaluation, and development of quality and process of animal-origin foods, Development of non-thermal process for improvement of safety of animal-origin foods, Understanding of muscle biology and cultured muscle production

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