Ultraviolet Technology
John Pierson,
leader of FPTD’s Environmental, Energy, and Food Safety Group, is maximizing
ultraviolet technology to disinfect liquids like fruit juices, marinades, and
brines. “Commercial viability may be here even though ultraviolet light does
not penetrate very deep, so only a small amount of liquid can be disinfected at
a time,” Pierson says. “U.V. disinfection can offer benefits because heat is
not used, so proteins are not denatured.” A recently patented advanced mixing
system makes it possible to present liquid uniformly to the light for the same
amount of time.
“We have been
focused on five-log disinfection of liquids that are relatively opaque to
germicidal ultraviolet light,” Pierson says. “Many of these liquids will only
transmit the required disinfection intensity less than one millimeter, so
systems must have long exposure times or extremely large surface- to-volume
ratios.”
The Georgia Tech
patented advanced disinfection system addresses both of these issues by
controlling the hydrodynamics. Much of the fundamental development has been
conducted using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). Five-log disinfection of
brines and raw juices has been successfully demonstrated under laminar flow
conditions; Pierson and colleagues are now conducting the testing needed for
FDA technology verification. The technology is available for licensing, he
adds.
Pierson is also
addressing water conservation, reuse, and recycling protocols relative to food
safety and sanitation. “The goal is to improve food processing water
conservation and reuse while ensuring that pathogen reduction strategies are
not negatively impacted,” he says. “One application is in poultry processing.
The results of pathogen testing are known well after processing. Establishing a
methodology for assessing cost-effective solutions will better enable
processors to refine their HACCP [hazard analysis and critical control point]
plans as they look for improved water conservation and reuse technologies.”
Water usage has
become an area that needs advanced sensor concepts and data acquisition and
control for process feedback related to pathogen reduction strategies, Pierson
says. Unfortunately, reliable sensors for real-time pathogen counts or matrix
independent disinfection capacity do not exist. Water usage data is usually
collected and logged manually by reading water meters at some frequency. With
these limitations in mind, Pierson’s group is working on developing
cost-effective technology that can achieve and maintain pathogen reduction.
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