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Engineering Functional Nanothin Multilayers on Food Packaging: Ice-Nucleating Polyethylene Films

Year: 2013

Journal: J. Agric. Food Chem., 2013, 61 (21), pp 5130–5138, 20130628

Authors: Zafer Gezgin ‡, Tung-Ching Lee †, and Qingrong Huang *†

Last authors: Qingrong Huang

Organizations: † Department of Food Science, Rutgers University, 65 Dudley Road, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901-8520, United States ‡ TÜBİTAK, The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey, Tunus Caddesi No. 80, 06100 Kavaklıdere/Ankara, Turkey

Country: USA, US, United States, United States of America, America, Turkey

Polyethylene is the most prevalent plastic and is commonly used as a packaging material. Despite its common use, there are not many studies on imparting functionalities to those films which can make them more desirable for frozen food packaging. Here, commercial low-density polyethylene (LDPE) films were oxidized by UV-ozone (UVO) treatment to obtain a negatively charged hydrophilic surface to allow fabrication of functional multilayers. An increase in hydrophilicity was observed when films were exposed to UVO for 4 min and longer. Thin multilayers were formed by dipping the UVO-treated films into biopolymer solutions, and extracellular ice nucleators (ECINs) were immobilized onto the film surface to form a functional top layer. Polyelectrolyte adsorption was studied and confirmed on silicon wafers by measuring the water contact angles of the layers and investigating the surface morphology via atomic force microscopy. An up to 4–5 °C increase in ice nucleation temperatures and an up to 10 min decrease in freezing times were observed with high-purity deionized water samples frozen in ECIN-coated LDPE films. Films retained their ice nucleation activity up to 50 freeze–thaw cycles. Our results demonstrate the potential of using ECIN-coated polymer films for frozen food application.