Impact of shoulders on the calculus of heat sterilization treatments with different bacterial spores.

Food Microbiol

R&D Department, Unidad Técnica, New Strategies and Food Preservation Techniques Area, Centro Nacional de Tecnología y Seguridad Alimentaria (CNTA), San Adrián, Navarra, Spain. Electronic address:

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Heat is the primary method for food preservation, but previous calculations based on linear heat treatment have shown inaccuracies due to deviations in inactivation curves.
  • The study analyzed the variability in shoulder length among various bacterial spores and how treatment temperature affects these shoulders, as well as the link between traditional D values and shoulder length.
  • Results indicated that certain bacterial spores, like B. weihenstephanensis and B. cereus, did not exhibit shoulders, while others like B. subtilis and G. stearothermophilus did, and that shoulder lengths correlate with heat resistance and temperature treatment, leading to a proposed equation involving a consistent ratio (Sl/D).

Article Abstract

To date, heat is still the most used technology in food preservation. The calculus of heat treatments is usually based on Bigelow observations i.e. treatment time is an exponential function of the heat treatment temperature. However, a number of researchers have reported deviations from linearity in heat inactivation curves that caused errors in the calculus. This research was designed to evaluate the variability of shoulder length among different sporulated species, the impact of treatment temperature on these shoulders and the relationship between the traditional D value and shoulder length. The heat inactivation kinetics of five bacterial spores of importance for the food industry was evaluated. B. weihenstephanensis and B. cereus did not show shoulders and D values calculated ranged from 0.99 to 0.23 and from 1.33 to 0.56 respectively at temperatures from 100 to 102.5 °C. On the other side B. subtilis, B. licheniformis and G. stearothermophilus showed shoulders of 1.75-0.42, 1.92-0.43 and 3.22-0.78 and D values of 1.52-0.32, 2.12-0.59 and 2.22-0.48 respectively in the range of temperatures tested. From the results obtained it was concluded that the presence and magnitude of shoulders depended on the bacterial spore species, the longest being those on the bacterial spores which showed greatest heat resistance. It has also been proved that shoulder lengths vary with treatment temperature in the same proportion of traditional D values, with the relationship Sl/D being constant. Thus, an equation which included the constant Sl/D was proposed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2020.103663DOI Listing

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