4.7 Article

Sustainable emerging sonication processing: Impact on fungicide reduction and the overall quality characteristics of tomato juice

Journal

ULTRASONICS SONOCHEMISTRY
Volume 94, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultsonch.2023.106313

Keywords

Sonication; Fungicide; Bioactive compounds; Colloidal stability; Microbial

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Sonication is an emerging sustainable and eco-friendly technology that has been widely explored in food processing and preservation. It has the advantages of low energy consumption and high efficiency compared to conventional decontamination methods, and it does not generate secondary pollutants. In this study, the impact of sonication on anilazine fungicide reduction, bioactive compounds, antioxidant activity, colloidal stability, and microbial load of tomato juice was analyzed. The results showed that sonication treatment at 40 minutes achieved the highest reduction of anilazine in tomato juice, reaching 80.52%.
Sonication is an emerging sustainable and eco-friendly technology that has been broadly explored in food pro-cessing and preservation. Sonication has the edges of low energy consumption and high efficiency than con-ventional decontamination methods and would not pass on secondary pollutants. In the current research, we analyzed the impact of sonication on anilazine fungicide reduction, bioactive compound, antioxidant activity, colloidal stability, and enzymatic and microbial load of tomato juice. Sonicated treatments were carried out at 40 kHz, 480 W, 30 +/- 2 degrees C for 0, 8, 16, 24, 32, and 40 min in an ultrasonic bath cleaner. The GC-MS outcomes revealed that the anilazine maximum reduction in tomato juice attained 80.52 % at 40 min of sonication. The anilazine concentration reduced significantly (p <= 0.05) with increased sonication time. In contrast, sonication treatments have acquired the highest TFC, TPC, ascorbic acid, carotenoids, lycopene, ABTS, and ORAC assay than the untreated sample. The Sonication process significantly improved (p <= 0.05) colloidal stability by reducing particle size distribution, apparent viscosity, and sedimentation index. Sonication prolonged tomato juice's shelf life by reducing the total viable count from 6.31 to 1.91 log CFU/mL. Polygalacturonase and pectin methyl esterase of the sonication sample at 40 min were inactivated by 44.32 % and 64.2 %, respectively. Considering this issue from a future perspective, sonication processing can be used industrially to enhance fruit juice's nutritional properties and shelf life and reduce pesticides and other organic residues.

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