Analysis of food packaging UV inks for chemicals with potential to migrate into food simulants |
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Authors: | S Papilloud D Baudraz |
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Affiliation: | Sicpa Printing Inks, Corporate Analytical and Sensory Research Unit, Lausanne, Switzerland. Stephane.Papilloud@SICPA.com |
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Abstract: | Ultraviolet (UV) inks are an alternative formulation system to the more usual paste or liquid inks (oils or solvents based) that dry mainly by evaporation or penetration into the printed substrate. Based on acrylic acid chemistry, UV inks dry (the exact term is 'curing') by the chemical process of photopolymerization. Their composition (acrylate monomers and oligomers together with photo-initiators) exposed to UV emission lamps on the printing press units enable the transformation of the freshly printed ink layer into a tack-free film. For UV inks intended for primary food packaging, special care has to be paid to potential migrating species like small photo-initiator molecules and acrylate monomers not cross-linked in the formed network. The paper presents chromatographic methods to ascertain the level of ink ingredients potentially available to migrate into food simulants (migration tests). GC/MS was employed to quantify the levels of photo-initiators or acrylic esters (acrylates). |
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Keywords: | Uv Inks Acrylates Photo-INITIATORS Migration Primary Food Packaging |
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