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Original Articles

Characterisation of food contact non-stick coatings containing TiO2 nanoparticles and study of their possible release into food

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 421-433 | Received 14 Sep 2016, Accepted 04 Dec 2016, Published online: 31 Jan 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Novel nanoparticles containing non-stick coatings have been developed for food contact applications such as frying pans. Possible release of nanoparticles from such coatings into food is not known. In this paper, the characterisation of commercially available non-stick coatings was performed by use of FTIR, electron and optical microscopy, EDXS and XRD analysis. Characterisation revealed that the coatings contained micron- and nanosized rutile TiO2 particles, and quartz SiO2 embedded in a silicone polymer matrix. In order to estimate possible migration of TiO2 nanoparticles from coatings into food, migration tests into simulants (deionised water, 3% acetic acid and 5 g l–1 citric acid) were performed (2 h at 100°C), and thermal and mechanical degradation of the matrix was studied. Simulants were analysed by ICP-MS after ultrafiltration and by microwave-assisted digestion. The concentration of titanium-containing particles that migrated into simulants was up to 861 µg l–1 (147 µg dm2). Titanium was present in simulants in ionic form as well. The presence of TiO2 nanoparticles in 3% acetic acid was confirmed by SEM-EDXS analysis. Thermal stability study (TG/DSC MS analysis) did not show degradation of the matrix under foreseeable conditions of use, but mechanical degradation studies (scratch and tribological testing) showed possible release (microgram quantities per punched sample) of titanium-containing nanoparticles. The matrix degradation results were confirmed by observations of the morphology of the same type of coatings actually used for food preparation. Dissolution from the surface and matrix degradation can both contribute to nanoparticles release from this type of non-stick food contact coatings.

Graphical Abstract

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Dr N. Drnovšek for SEM imaging ((b)), Dr M. Maček for DSC/TG MS analysis, Dr S. Paskvale for scratch testing and National Laboratory of Health, Environment and Food for the use of FTIR and migration tests equipment.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Supplemental data

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by European Commission FP7 [grant agreement no. 621329].

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