4.6 Article

Synthesis of a Novel Chitosan/Basil Oil Blend and Development of Novel Low Density Poly Ethylene/Chitosan/Basil Oil Active Packaging Films Following a Melt-Extrusion Process for Enhancing Chicken Breast Fillets Shelf-Life

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26061585

Keywords

low density poly-ethylene; chitosan; basil oil; active packaging; barrier properties; lipid oxidation; shelf life

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The study developed an advanced active packaging film by adsorbing hydrophobic Basil-Oil into hydrophilic chitosan and incorporating the blend into low-density polyethylene via a green evaporation/adsorption process. The resulting composite films showed improved packaging properties, with the film containing 10% CS_BO content exhibiting the best performance. Chicken breast fillets packaged using this film exhibited significantly lower lipid oxidation values compared to those packaged with pure LDPE film.
An innovative process for the adsorption of the hydrophobic Basil-Oil (BO) into the hydrophilic food byproduct chitosan (CS) and the development of an advanced low-density polyethylene/chitosan/basil-oil (LDPE/CS_BO) active packaging film was investigated in this work. The idea of this study was the use of the BO as both a bioactive agent and a compatibilizer. The CS was modified to a CS_BO hydrophobic blend via a green evaporation/adsorption process. This blend was incorporated directly in the LDPE to produce films with advanced properties. All the obtained composite films exhibited improved packaging properties. The film with 10% CS_BO content exhibited the best packaging properties, i.e., 33.0% higher tensile stress, 31.0% higher water barrier, 54.3% higher oxygen barrier, and 12.3% higher antioxidant activity values compared to the corresponding values of the LDPE films. The lipid oxidation values of chicken breast fillets which were packaged under vacuum using this film were measured after seven and after fourteen days of storage. These values were found to be lower by around 41% and 45%, respectively, compared with the corresponding lipid oxidation values of pure LDPE film.

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