Emerging non-destructive methods for quality and safety monitoring of spices
Autor: | Mohan Naik, Venkatachalapathy Natarajan, Nikitha Modupalli, Sunil Ck |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Agricultural commodity
Authentication Computer science business.industry media_common.quotation_subject Supply chain 010401 analytical chemistry Big data 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences 040401 food science 01 natural sciences 0104 chemical sciences 0404 agricultural biotechnology Risk analysis (engineering) Non destructive Quality (business) Food quality business Food Science Biotechnology media_common Safety monitoring |
Zdroj: | Trends in Food Science & Technology. 108:133-147 |
ISSN: | 0924-2244 |
Popis: | Background The growing concerns about food quality and safety among consumers have increased the need for food authentication, which can be a powerful tool to combat different types of food frauds in the supply chain. Spices are recognised as high-value products and often adulterated like other agricultural commodities, which can pose a serious health risk and economic damage. Therefore, rapid, precise, accurate and up-to-date sophisticated analytical methods are the prerequisite to detect adulterations/frauds in spices. Scope and approach The officially approved laboratory analytical testing methods for spices are time consuming and destructive. These limitations can be alleviated by search of rapid and precise non-destructive quality testing methods. The fact that spectroscopic, acoustic, and ultrasound and artificial sensing techniques have immense food quality testing and safety monitoring applications. Spectroscopy measures the electromagnetic radiation emits by substrates and uses the data to determine its properties, whereas artificial sensing methods replicate the human sensory responses mechanically. This review will present the emerging non-destructive quality testing methods used to authenticate spices, including determining the origin, identifying adulterants and contaminants. Moreover, challenges and future trends in spice authentication using non-targeted evaluation have been addressed. Key findings and conclusions The non-destructive techniques have been proven to be useful tools for the quality and safety monitoring of spices. The advances in the spectroscopy and e-sensing techniques have made the detection of adulteration in spices in a precise and fail-proof way, and have been efficient in authenticating the spices. Their utility in evaluating the quality and safety of spices needs to be improved using the new-age data analytics like big data and simplified into hand-held systems for efficient and simplified use. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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