Thermal insulation packaging for cold-chain deliveries made from feathers

Publication date: September 2019Source: Food Packaging and Shelf Life, Volume 21Author(s): Elena Dieckmann, Balázs Nagy, Kika Yiakoumetti, Leila Sheldrick, Christopher CheesemanAbstractThis paper reports on new thermal insulation packaging materials made from feathers. Clean and disinfected feathers from the poultry industry have been processed into fibres and air laid using commercial pilot-plant facilities to form non-woven feather fibre composite mats. This process can produce materials with different thickness and density by varying the processing conditions and mat composition. The thermal performance of non-woven feather fibre packaging liners has been compared to expanded polystyrene (EPS) to assess the potential for use in temperature-controlled deliveries. Experiments involved monitoring the time-temperature profile of meat substitute materials and coolants stored inside cardboard boxes lined with thermal insulation. The results show that feather fibre composite insulation has comparable thermal performance to EPS and may out-perform EPS under some conditions. It is concluded that low-cost, lightweight and sustainable non-woven feather fibre liners have potential to displace the materials currently used for delivering chilled and frozen foods and other products susceptible to degradation by high temperatures during delivery.
Source: Food Packaging and Shelf Life - Category: Food Science Source Type: research
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