An oil-based composite is employed to monitor the exposure to oxygen inside food packaging, aiming at evaluating the package integrity and the freshness of food. The composite is an oxygen-sensitive printable ink consisting of electrically conductive silver microflakes, embedded in a vegetable oil matrix. The sensitivity of the oil to oxygen is driven by its high content of unsaturated fatty acids that polymerize and shrink upon exposure to atmospheric oxygen. Shrinkage increases the silver concentration and induces percolation, manifested by a steep increase in the electrical conductivity of the composite. We found that the electrical conductivity of the composite is related to its exposure time to air. Employing linseed oil as a matrix demonstrates an increase in electrical conductivity from 10–11 to 10–3 S/cm after only 6 days of exposure to air. We also show that this time span could be modified by changing the oil type to fit various expiration periods of food products.
The determination of food freshness along manufacturer-to-consumer transportation lines is a challenging problem that calls for cheap, simple, reliable, and nontoxic sensors inside food packaging. We present a novel approach for oxygen sensing in which the exposure time to oxygen—rather than the oxygen concentration per se—is monitored. We developed a nontoxic hybrid composite-based sensor consisting of graphite powder (conductive filler), clay (viscosity control filler) and linseed oil (the matrix). Upon exposure to oxygen, the insulating linseed oil is oxidized, leading to polymerization and shrinkage of the matrix and hence to an increase in the concentration of the electrically conductive graphite powder up to percolation, which serves as an indicator of food spoilage. In the developed sensor, the exposure time to oxygen (days to weeks) is obtained by measuring the electrical conductivity though the sensor. The sensor functionality could be tuned by changing the oil viscosity, the aspect ratio of the conductive filler, and/or the concentration of the clay, thereby adapting the sensor to monitoring the quality of food products with different sensitivities to oxygen exposure time (e.g., fish vs grain).
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