50% found this document useful (2 votes)
2K views9 pages

Lecture 1-Role of Water and Water Activity in Foods

Water activity, not just water content, is important for microbial growth and food stability. Water activity refers to the energy status of water in a food and its availability to support chemical reactions and microbial growth. Most microbes cannot grow below a water activity of 0.6, with different thresholds for bacteria, yeasts, and molds. Food stability maps show the relationship between water activity and rates of deterioration, with very low rates at low water activities increasing above a critical point as water becomes more available. Controlling water activity through methods like concentration, drying, freezing, or adding solutes is key to food preservation and shelf life.

Uploaded by

heartwin1
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
50% found this document useful (2 votes)
2K views9 pages

Lecture 1-Role of Water and Water Activity in Foods

Water activity, not just water content, is important for microbial growth and food stability. Water activity refers to the energy status of water in a food and its availability to support chemical reactions and microbial growth. Most microbes cannot grow below a water activity of 0.6, with different thresholds for bacteria, yeasts, and molds. Food stability maps show the relationship between water activity and rates of deterioration, with very low rates at low water activities increasing above a critical point as water becomes more available. Controlling water activity through methods like concentration, drying, freezing, or adding solutes is key to food preservation and shelf life.

Uploaded by

heartwin1
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 9

Role of water and water activity in foods

Importance of water in foods

The shelf-life of foods is limited by the activity of microorganisms. Water also has a profound influence on the physical and chemical processes, which influence shelf life. However, extensive studies on food properties and reactions in foods have established that water content as such (per se) is not an adequate predictor of food stability. dehydration and freezing reduce the availability of water to microbiological activity.

Food preservation operations such as concentration,


Other preservation processes like adding solutes (sugars or salts) also reduce the availability of water to microorganisms.

Significance of water activity

The concept of water activity (aw) is more than 50 years old. William James Scott showed in 1953 that microorganisms have a limiting aw level for growth. It is now generally accepted that aw is more closely related to the microbial, chemical, and physical properties of foods than is total moisture content. Next to temperature, aw is considered one of the most important parameters in food preservation and processing (van den Berg 1986). The aw of a food describes the energy status of the water in that food, which is an indicator of the availability of water to act as a solvent and participate in the chemical/bio-chemical reactions.

Water activity determines the shelf-life of the product. Aw affects the enzyme activity and stability of foods. Most enzymatic reactions are slowed down at water activities below 0.8. Aw also affects the stability, flow and caking of milk powder and other powdery food materials during storage. Aw also affects the textural properties of foods. Water activity is defined by: aw =P/Pw where P =equilibrium partial vapour pressure of water in food at a given temperature Pw= vapor pressure of pure water at the same temperature.

Thus, water activity is a thermodynamic entity.

Approximate water activities of selected dairy products


Product Dried milk products Butter, unsalted Butter, salted Sweetened condensed milk Hard cheese Soft cheese Cream Frozen desserts Fermented milk products Milk and whey Khoa/Pedha Paneer Kunda Aw at 25C 0.1-0.3 0.99 0.91-0.93 0.77-0.85 0.86-0.97 0.96-0.98 0.99 0.98-0.99 0.97-0.99 1.0 0.92-0.96 0.99 0.86

Food Stability Diagram

Figure. Food stability map (Adopted from Barbosa-Cnovas et al 2007)

The effects of aw on growth of microorganisms and food stability can be described using stability maps showing relative rates of deteriorative changes against aw. It is obvious that water is required for the growth of microorganisms in addition to required environmental parameters and nutrients. It is evident that some reactions exhibit extremely low rates at low water activities, but their rates increase above a critical aw as diffusion becomes enhanced. However, the reaction rates decrease at high water activities, possibly as a result of dilution. These reactions also are affected by the glass transition of amorphous foods because the molecular mobility is affected by the glass transition.

Food stability maps also can relate glass transitiondependent changes with aw. However, the rates of glass transition-dependent changes are affected by food composition rather than the presence of moisture. They may occur with no water present in the solids or at water activities corresponding to the critical aw of the particular material. This Tg-water sorption plot is useful for the selection of storage conditions for low- and intermediatemoisture foods. Therefore, it is essential to establish the stability maps showing critical values for aw allowing sufficient molecular mobility to result in structural transformation, increased rates of deteriorative reactions and component crystallization.

Minimal Aw requirement for multiplication of microorganisms


Aw Bacteria Yeasts Molds 0.97-0.98 0.96 0.95 0.94 0.93 0.92 0.90 0.88 0.86 0.84 0.83 0.75 0.70 0.62 0.61 Staphylococcus Halobacterium, Halococcus Saccharomyces Clostridium botulinum, Pseudomonas Lactobacillus, Proteus, Flavobacterium, Shigella Clostridium perfrigens, Enterobacter, Escherichia, Salmonella Bacillus, Microbacterium, Streptococcus B. stearothermophilus, Micrococcus B. subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus S. Aureus (aerobic), Vibrio Candida Hansenula, Saccharomyces Debaryomyces Pencillium Aspergillus Aspergillus Chrysosporium Eurotium Monascus Cladosporium Alternaria, Aspergillus Saccharomyces Stachybotrys Botrytis, Mucor Rhizopus -

Adopted from the compendium on Advances in packaging of dairy and food products, NDRI, Karnal.

You might also like