Effects of the Plasma-Activated Water on the Quality and Preservation of Fresh-Cut Lettuce.
Fecha
2023Autor
Chamorro, Juan Camilo
Denoya, Gabriela Inés
Santamaría, Brenda
Fina, Brenda
Ferreyra, Matías
Cejas, Ezequiel
Rodriguez, Anabel
Vaudagna, Sergio
Prevosto, Leandro
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— The effect of the application of plasma-activated
water (PAW) on the quality and preservation of fresh-cut lettuce
is reported in this article. PAW was produced by using a liquid cathode air discharge. The average (bulk) water temperature was
kept at ∼22 ◦
C during the activation procedure and stored at
4
◦ C for up to five days. The pH value, electrical conductivity,
and concentrations of H2O2 and NO−
in liquid at day 1 were
2.81, 1492µS/cm, and 77.8 and 223.4 mg/L, respectively, with
slight variations over the whole storage time. No measurable
amounts of NO− 10 2 were found. Twenty pieces of lettuce leaves
were washed for 1 and 5 min in 1 L of PAW and stored
for one and five days. PAW treatments were compared to tap
water treatments. The lettuce samples were stored at 4 ◦
C
and analyzed on days 1, 3, and 7. The chromatic parameter
results suggest that PAW treatments significantly reduce the
degradation of lettuce chlorophyll from day 3 of refrigerated
storage. The lettuce firmness was not significantly modified. The
microbiological results of aerobic mesophilic, enterobacteriaceae,
and psychrotrophs populations have shown that lettuce treated
with PAW after three days of storage exhibited the strongest
inactivation efficiency. Psychrotrophs counts were maintained for
up to seven days. Similar inactivation efficiencies were found
regardless of the PAW storage time. PAW treatments also favored
both the antioxidant capacity FRAP, ABTS, and DPPH, and the
total phenolic.
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