Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6665692 Journal of Food Engineering 2015 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
To ensure the safety of metals and alloys intended for food contact, a new European test protocol (CoE protocol) using citric acid as a food simulant was published in 2013. This study investigated the influence of citric acid and exposure conditions on the metal release from an austenitic manganese stainless steel (AISI 201). Exposures in 5 g/L citric acid resulted in significantly lower metal releases compared with specific release limits set by the CoE protocol. 5 g/L (0.3 vol%) citric acid was more aggressive than 3 vol% acetic acid (Italian protocol) due to higher metal complexation. Studies on abraded surfaces revealed that most metals were released during the first 0.5 h of exposure due to surface passivation. Surface abrasion, increased temperature (40-100 °C), increased surface area to solution volume ratio (0.25-2 cm2/mL) and increased citric acid concentration (0-21 g/L) all resulted in increased released metal quantities.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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