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UV-C LED irradiation reduces Salmonella on chicken and food contact surfaces

Authors :
Brayan D. Montoya
Mariana Fernandez
Alexandra Calle
Marcelo Schmidt
Jonathan E. Thompson
Source :
Foods Vol. 10 : 1459, 2021., Repositorio UNA, Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica, instacron:UNA, Foods, Vol 10, Iss 1459, p 1459 (2021), Foods, Volume 10, Issue 7
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI, 2021.

Abstract

Ultraviolet (UV-C) light-emitting diode (LED) light at a wavelength of 250–280 nm was used to disinfect skinless chicken breast (CB), stainless steel (SS) and high-density polyethylene (HD) inoculated with Salmonella enterica. Irradiances of 2 mW/cm2 (50%) or 4 mW/cm2 (100%) were used to treat samples at different exposure times. Chicken samples had the lowest Salmonella reduction with 1.02 and 1.78 Log CFU/cm2 (p ≤ 0.05) after 60 and 900 s, respectively at 50% irradiance. Higher reductions on CB were obtained with 100% illumination after 900 s (&gt<br />3.0 Log CFU/cm2). Salmonella on SS was reduced by 1.97 and 3.48 Log CFU/cm2 after 60 s of treatment with 50% and 100% irradiance, respectively. HD showed a lower decrease of Salmonella, but still statistically significant (p ≤ 0.05), with 1.25 and 1.77 Log CFU/cm2 destruction for 50 and 100% irradiance after 60 s, respectively. Longer exposure times of HD to UV-C yielded up to 99.999% (5.0 Log CFU/cm2) reduction of Salmonella with both irradiance levels. While UV-C LED treatment was found effective to control Salmonella on chicken and food contact surfaces, we propose three mechanisms contributing to reduced efficacy of disinfection: bacterial aggregation, harboring in food and work surface pores and light absorption by fluids associated with CB.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Foods Vol. 10 : 1459, 2021., Repositorio UNA, Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica, instacron:UNA, Foods, Vol 10, Iss 1459, p 1459 (2021), Foods, Volume 10, Issue 7
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....43fbd1101121d17bcc0345f9c131006e