Nanostructured products are an actively growing area for food research, but there is little information on the sustainability of processes used to make these products. In this Review, we advocate for selection of sustainable process technologies during initial stages of laboratory-scale developments of nanofoods. We show that selection is assisted by predictive sustainability assessment(s) based on conventional technologies, including exploratory ex ante and “anticipatory” life-cycle assessment. We demonstrate that sustainability assessments for conventional food process technologies can be leveraged to design nanofood process concepts and technologies. We critically review emerging nanostructured food products including encapsulated bioactive molecules and processes used to structure these foods at laboratory, pilot, and industrial scales. We apply a rational method via learning lessons from sustainability of unit operations in conventional food processing and critically apportioned lessons between emerging and conventional approaches. We conclude that this method provides a quantitative means to incorporate sustainability during process design for nanostructured foods. Findings will be of interest and benefit to a range of food researchers, engineers, and manufacturers of process equipment.
CITATION STYLE
Hessel, V., Escribà-Gelonch, M., Schmidt, S., Tran, N. N., Davey, K., Al-Ani, L. A., … Gras, S. (2023). Nanofood Process Technology: Insights on How Sustainability Informs Process Design. ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, 11(31), 11437–11458. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.3c01223
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.