Current location:home page > Food Technology

Ultraviolet ray machine to prevent mikan from rotting

A Japanese research institute has developed a machine that uses ultraviolet rays to protect mikan -s…
A Japanese research institute has developed a machine that uses ultraviolet rays to protect mikan -satsuma- against rotting. Researchers at the Saika Technological Institute Foundation, which produces food quality inspection equipment and devices, and other parties, including the Shizuoka prefectural government, discovered that ultraviolet ray application causes stress to the fruit, stimulating its self-defense function. This leads to production of a sort of polyphenol known as scoparone that has antibacterial effects and stops the skin from decomposing.

Saika has developed and marketed equipment to prevent mold from forming during storage and transportation of mikan. Mikan are rotated and carried on a conveyor belt in the machine for even exposure to ultraviolet rays for 20 to 25 seconds.

The machine can treat 700 kilograms of mikan per hour, and the antibacterial effect will continue for two to three weeks, according to the scientists.

According to asahi.com, Mikan farmers visually sort out damaged oranges before shipping, but undetected scratches and damages caused during delivery can accelerate decomposition, leading to rotten fruit by the time it reaches consumers.

In their experiments, the scientists exposed half of a mikan to ultraviolet rays and left the other half untreated. The untreated section went rotten in most mikan, but less decay was detected in the treated half after the fruit was kept for a week with small scratches and mold.

 
标签: mikanoranges

Related articles

PepsiCo bottle does not infringe Coke ‘Contour' trademarks – German court

The Hamburg Regional Court said – in a verdict delivered on May 31 in the case LG Hamburg 315 O 310/…

PTI's new testing facilities to improve 'speed-to-market'

PTI-Europe, a wholly-owned subsidiary of US-based Plastic Technologies, Inc. (PTI), has installed a…

Coke opens new 'closed loop' site to double UK rPET output

The ₤15m (€18.65m) site in the country of Lincolnshire was opened by Environment Minister Lord Taylo…

Ramona's Mexican Food to implement CDC Software’s application suite

Through the software implementation, Ramona's also seeks to improve efficiency, reduce costs, facili…

Cherry grading technology 'more perceptive than human eye'

Cherry grading technology 'more perceptive than human eye'

Australia's GP Graders has recently supplied a 10 lane AirJet™ Electronic Cherry Grader with Defect…

2013 International Production & Processing Expo (IPPE)

2013 International Production & Processing Expo (IPPE)

The 2013 International Production & Processing Expo (IPPE) has set a record with over 1,150 exhi…