Litcius/Paper detail

Surface Treatment of Eggshells with Low-Energy Electron Beam

Noriaki Kataoka, Daigo Kawahara, Masayuki Sekiguchi

2021Journal of Radiation Protection and Research10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Salmonella enteritidis (SE) was the main cause of the pandemic of foodborne salmonellosis. The surface of eggs' shells can be contaminated with this bacterium; however, washing them with sodium hypochlorite solution not only reduces their flavor but also heavily impacts the environment. An alternative to this is surface sterilization using low-energy electron beam. It is known that irradiation with 1 kGy resulted in a significant 3.9 log reduction (reduction factor of 10,000) in detectable SE on the shell. FAO/IAEA/WHO indicates irradiation of any food commodity up to an overall average dose of 10 kGy presents no toxicological hazard. On the other hand, the Food and Drug Administration has deemed a dose of up to 3 kGy is allowable for eggs. However, the maximum dose permitted to be absorbed by an edible part (i.e. , internal dose) is 0.1 Gy in Japan and 0.5 Gy in European Union.

Topics & Concepts

EggshellIrradiationSterilization (economics)Monte Carlo methodSodium hypochloriteContaminationMaterials scienceChemistryRadiochemistryEnvironmental scienceBiologyNuclear physicsPhysicsMathematicsEcologyForeign exchange marketOrganic chemistryStatisticsEconomicsForeign exchangeMonetary economicsRadiation Effects and DosimetryMicrobial Inactivation MethodsListeria monocytogenes in Food Safety