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Development and characterization of carrageenan/grapefruit seed extract composite films for active packaging.
Int J Biol Macromol. 2014 Jul; 68:258-66.IJ

Abstract

Carrageenan-based antimicrobial films were developed by incorporation of grape fruit seed extract (GSE) at different concentration into the polymer using a solvent casing method and their physical, mechanical, and antimicrobial properties were examined. The carrageenan/GSE composite films appeared yellowish tint due to the polyphenolic compounds in the GSE. SEM analysis showed rough surface with sponge like structures on the cross section of the films. FT-IR results indicated at GSE had good compatibility with carrageenan. The amorphous structure of polymer films was not changed by the incorporation of GSE. But, the addition of GSE increased moisture content, water vapor permeability, and surface hydrophilicity of the films. The tensile strength and elastic modulus decreased with increasing content of GSE, however, the elongation at break increased significantly up to 6.6μg/mL of GSE then decreased thereafter. Thermal stability of the films was not influenced by GSE incorporation. The carrageenan/GSE composite films exhibited great antibacterial activity against food borne pathogens. These results suggest that the carrageenan-based composite films have a high potential for being used as an antimicrobial or active food packaging applications.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Food Engineering and Bionanocomposite Research Institute, Mokpo National University, 61 Dorimri, Chungkyemyon, Muangun 534-729, Jeonnam, Republic of Korea.Department of Food Engineering and Bionanocomposite Research Institute, Mokpo National University, 61 Dorimri, Chungkyemyon, Muangun 534-729, Jeonnam, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: jwrhim@mokpo.ac.kr.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

24832986

Citation

Kanmani, Paulraj, and Jong-Whan Rhim. "Development and Characterization of Carrageenan/grapefruit Seed Extract Composite Films for Active Packaging." International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, vol. 68, 2014, pp. 258-66.
Kanmani P, Rhim JW. Development and characterization of carrageenan/grapefruit seed extract composite films for active packaging. Int J Biol Macromol. 2014;68:258-66.
Kanmani, P., & Rhim, J. W. (2014). Development and characterization of carrageenan/grapefruit seed extract composite films for active packaging. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, 68, 258-66. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2014.05.011
Kanmani P, Rhim JW. Development and Characterization of Carrageenan/grapefruit Seed Extract Composite Films for Active Packaging. Int J Biol Macromol. 2014;68:258-66. PubMed PMID: 24832986.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Development and characterization of carrageenan/grapefruit seed extract composite films for active packaging. AU - Kanmani,Paulraj, AU - Rhim,Jong-Whan, Y1 - 2014/05/12/ PY - 2014/03/14/received PY - 2014/04/23/revised PY - 2014/05/05/accepted PY - 2014/5/17/entrez PY - 2014/5/17/pubmed PY - 2015/1/22/medline KW - Active packaging KW - Antimicrobial activity KW - Carrageenan KW - Composite film KW - Grapefruit seed extract SP - 258 EP - 66 JF - International journal of biological macromolecules JO - Int J Biol Macromol VL - 68 N2 - Carrageenan-based antimicrobial films were developed by incorporation of grape fruit seed extract (GSE) at different concentration into the polymer using a solvent casing method and their physical, mechanical, and antimicrobial properties were examined. The carrageenan/GSE composite films appeared yellowish tint due to the polyphenolic compounds in the GSE. SEM analysis showed rough surface with sponge like structures on the cross section of the films. FT-IR results indicated at GSE had good compatibility with carrageenan. The amorphous structure of polymer films was not changed by the incorporation of GSE. But, the addition of GSE increased moisture content, water vapor permeability, and surface hydrophilicity of the films. The tensile strength and elastic modulus decreased with increasing content of GSE, however, the elongation at break increased significantly up to 6.6μg/mL of GSE then decreased thereafter. Thermal stability of the films was not influenced by GSE incorporation. The carrageenan/GSE composite films exhibited great antibacterial activity against food borne pathogens. These results suggest that the carrageenan-based composite films have a high potential for being used as an antimicrobial or active food packaging applications. SN - 1879-0003 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/24832986/Development_and_characterization_of_carrageenan/grapefruit_seed_extract_composite_films_for_active_packaging_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -