• Title/Summary/Keyword: PSL-TL

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Monitoring on the Foods not Approved for Irradiation in Korea by PSL and TL Detection Method (광자극발광법과 열발광법을 이용한 국내 방사선 조사 허용 외 식품에 대한 실태 조사)

  • Cho, Joon-Il;Lee, Ji-Ae;Lee, Soon-Ho;Hwang, In-Gyun
    • Journal of Food Hygiene and Safety
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.73-78
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    • 2010
  • This research was conducted to assess applicability of photostimulated luminescence (PSL) and Thermoluminescence (TL) methods for investigation of infant and young children products, nut, seasoned dried fish, spice, dried fruits, fruit & vegetable, grain and marine products, which are not approved for irradiation in Korea. PSL results show that the photon counts of non-irradiated samples were lower than 700, while those of irradiated samples were higher than 700. In TL measurement, TL ratio of irradiated samples were higher than 0.1 or ones can decrease below 0.1 whereas the temperature range of TL Glow curve was between $150{\sim}250^{\circ}C$. Monitoring result about 8 class of 325 not approved to irradiated foods, photon counts of samples were less than 700, and after re-irradiation TL Ratio ($TL_1/TL_2$) through re-irradiation step at 1 kGy were higher than 0.1 for the all samples. Therefore, these results suggested that PSL and TL measurements were useful detection methods for 8 class food products not approved to irradiation in Korea and all sample (325 cases) were not irradiated when we analysed by PSL and TL methods.

Detection Characteristics of Irradiated Aloe vera by the Analysis of PSL, TL and ESR (감마선 조사된 알로에 베라의 PSL, TL 및 ESR 검지 특성)

  • Kim Byeong-Keun;Lim Sang-Yong;Song Hyun-Pa;Yun Hye-Jeong;Kwon Joong-Ho;Kim Dong-Ho
    • Food Science and Preservation
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.61-65
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    • 2006
  • Photostimulated luminescence (PSL), thermoluminescence(TL) and electron spin resonance (ESR) analyses were conducted to detect irradiation treatment of aloe vera powder, which was gamma-irradiated at 1, 3, 5 and 7 kGy. The non-irradiated aloe vera powder indicated below 700 of photon count in PSL, whereas, irradiated at 1 kGy and more, it showed more than 5,000 photon counts, indicating that it is feasible to detect the irradiation of aloe vera powder through PSL In the result of TL, from the minerals of the samples that were irradiated at more than 1 kGy, TL glow curve was able to be seen at around $150^{\circ}C$. As the quantity of irradiation goes up, the ratio of $TL_1\;and\;TL_2$ also increased in proportion to that of irradiation. In the result of ESR analysis, unspecific centeral ESR signal was could be seen. As the amount of irradiation on the samples increased to the level of $R^2=0.97$, the signal intensity also rose similarly. In conclusion, the PSL, TL and ESR exhibited the typical signals induced by irradiation treatment and were able to successfully detect all of the irradiated aloe vera powder. In addition, we found a positive correlation between the intensity of ESR and TL signals and irradiation doses.

Application of PSL-TL Combined Detection Method on irradiated Composite Seasoning Products and Spices (방사선 조사 복합조미식품과 향신료의 확인을 위한 PSL-TL의 적용)

  • Chung, Hyung-Wook;Park, Sung-Kug;Han, Sang-Bae;Choi, Dong-Mi;Lee, Dong-Ha
    • Journal of Food Hygiene and Safety
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.206-211
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    • 2008
  • Photostimulated luminescence(PSL)-Thermoluminescence(TL) combined analysis was applied to detect whether composite seasoning products and spices were irradiated or not. Samples were irradiated with $^{60}Co$ at $0{\sim}7$ kGy. A total of 12 different samples(6 of composite seasoning products and 6 of spices) was examined. Depending on the PSL results, TL analysis was performed. In case of both PSL positive(${\geq}5,000$ counts) and intermediate($700{\sim}5000$ counts), TL analysis had to be performed to confirm the result of PSL. Using TL, the shape of the glow curve(Glow 1) made it possible to identify the irradiated samples. In addition, The TL glow ratio(Glow 1/Glow 2) obtained by normalization was less than 0.1 for the non-irradiated samples and ${\geq}0.29$ for irradiated ones, respectively.

Detection Characteristics of Irradiated Dried Vegetables by Analyzing Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL) and Thermoluminescence (TL) (물리적 방법(PSL, TL)을 이용한 방사선 조사 건조 채소류의 검지)

  • Kim Mi-Yeung;Kim Byeong-Keun;Kim Kyo-Youn;Bhatti Ijaz A.;Kwon Joong-Ho
    • Food Science and Preservation
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.211-215
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    • 2006
  • Photostimulated luminescence (PSI) and thermoluminescence (TL) were analyzed for dried vegetables irradiated at 0, 1, 4 and 7 kGy, such as dried oak mushroom, spinach, radish leaves, water cress, radish, and pumpkin, to detect irradiation treatment. PSL results that photon counts for non-irradiated samples were lower than 700 that corresponds to negative, while those of irradiated samples over 1 kGy showed positive photon counts$(\geq5000)$, indicating irradiation treatment Meantime, TL ratio by normalization was lower than 0.021 in threshold value for non-irradiated samples and more than 0.653 for irradiated samples, and therefore it was possible to detect whether the 6 kinds of dried vegetables were irradiated or not by analyzing PSL and TL.

Application of PSL and TL Detection Method by Irradiation doses on the Foods Approved to Irradiation in Korea (조사 선량에 따른 품목별 PSL과 TL 시험법 적용 가능성 검증)

  • Cho, Joon-Il;Lee, Ji-Ae;Chung, Hyung-Wook;Lee, Soon-Ho;Hwang, In-Gyun
    • Journal of Food Hygiene and Safety
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.43-48
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    • 2010
  • This research was conducted to know application of Photostimulated luminescence (PSL) and Thermoluminesce(TL) methods by irradiation dose for leaching tea, sauces and starch approved in Korea. Leaching tea, sauces and starch powder were treated with $^{60}Co$ gamma ray at dose 0~10 kGy for detection trial whether they are irradiated or not by measuring PSL and TL for whole samples. PSL values were less than threshold value 700 and were, negative for non-irradiated samples but more than 5,000 and were positive for irradiated ones. PSL results of leaching tea and sauces showed the correct identification for non-irradiated and irradiated samples, respectively except starch samples. To enhance the reliability of the TL result, the first glow curve (TL1) was compared with the second glove curve (TL2) obtained after a re-irradiation step at 1 kGy. The TL ratio ($TL_1/TL_2$) was in good agreement with the reported TL threshold for both the non-irradiated (< 0.1) and irradiated (> 0.1) samples. TL results of leaching tea, sauces, starch showed the correct identification for non-irradiated and irradiated samples, respectively. This study was performed to know application of PSL and TL methods for leaching tea, sauces and starch, and the methods were able to detect the irradiation products.

The Detection of Irradiated Composite Seasoning Foods by Analyzing Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL), Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) and Thermoluminescence (TL) (PSL, ESR 및 TL 측정에 의한 복합조미식품의 방사선 조사여부 검지)

  • Kwon Joong-Ho;Kim Mi-Yeung;Kim Byeong-Keun;Chung Hyung-Wook;Kim Tae-Cheol;Kim Soo-Jin
    • Food Science and Preservation
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.55-60
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    • 2006
  • Two kinds of composite seasoning products (beef broth powder, polk bone extract powder) were used for a detection trial of gamma irradiation treatment up to 10 kGy by analyzing photostimulated luminescence (PSL), electron spin resonance (ESR) and thermoluminescence(TL). PSL results showed that the photon counts of non-irradiated samples were lower than 700, while those of irradiated samples were higher than 5000, which makes it possible to screen irradiated composite seasoning products at 1 kGy or over from the non-irradiated control. ESR signals measured for both irradiated samples were not irradiation-specific, even though they were dose dependent in the signal intensity. Radiation-induced TL glow curves were found in irradiated beef broth powder and furthernmore, TL ratio $(TL_4/TL_2)$ obtained by a re-irradiation step could verify the detection result of TL1 glow curves, showing ratios lower than 0.05 in the non-irradiated sample and higher than 1.00 in irradiated ones.

Physical Detection Properties of Irradiated Wheat and Corn Treated with Different Radiation Sources (방사선 조사선원에 따른 밀과 옥수수의 물리적 검지 특성)

  • Kim, Gui-Ran;Lee, Ju-Woon;Kim, Jeong-Sook;Kwon, Joong-Ho
    • Food Science and Preservation
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    • v.16 no.2
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    • pp.211-216
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    • 2009
  • This study determined the photostimulated luminescence(PSL), thermoluminescence(TL), and electron spin resonance(ESR) properties of wheat and corn irradiated with 0-10 kGy of gamma-ray or electron-beam. PSL values of both irradiated grains, regardless of radiation source, were 241-429 photons/sec in nonirradiated samples(negative values, defined as ${\leq}700$ photons/60 sec) and 5,528-40,870 photons/60 sec in irradiated ones(positive values, defined as ${\geq}5,000$ photons/sec), thereby distinguishing irradiated from nonirradiated samples. The TL glow curves($TL_1$) peaked at around $300^{\circ}C$ in nonirradiated samples, but at about $180^{\circ}C$ in irradiated samples, at high intensities, regardless of radiation source. The TL ratios($TL_1/TL_2$) calculated to strengthen $TL_1$ data reliability were less than 0.03 for nonirradiated samples and over 0.20 for irradiated materials, in good agreement with threshold values for nonirradiated(${\leq}0.1$) and irradiated(${\geq}0.1$) samples. ESR analysis was not applicable in identification of irradiated wheat and corn. Electron-beam irradiation resulted in higher PSL and TL signals than did gamma-rays, at the same applied doses.

Identification Characteristics of Irradiated Dried-Spicy Vegetables by Analyzing Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL), Thermoluminescence (TL) and Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) (방사선조사 건조향신채소의 PSL, TL 및 ESR 검지 특성)

  • Kwon Joong-Ho;Kim Mi-Yeung;Kim Byeong-Keun;Lee Jeong-Eun;Kim Dong-Ho;Lee Ju-Woon;Byun Myung-Woo;Lee Chang-Bok
    • Food Science and Preservation
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.50-54
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    • 2006
  • The identification characteristics of inadiated dried onion and garlic at 1, 4 and 7 kGy were investigated by analyzing their photostimulated luminescence (PSL), thermoluminescence (TL) and electron spin resonance (ESR). The PSL results showed that the photon counts of non-irradiated dried onion were less than 700 (negative) and those of irradiated samples at 1kGy or more were over 5000 (positive), making it possible to discriminate non-irradiated onions from irradiated ones. However, the intermediate counts (700-5000) were observed in irradiated garlic at 1 and 4 kGy, even though positive counts were measured in 7 kGy group. Radiation-induced TL glow curves $(TL_1)$ were measured at $150^{\circ}C$ range in both irradiated onion and garlic samples at 1 kGy or more, which could identify irradiated groups. Furthermore, determination of TL ratios $(TL_1/TL_2)$ for both samples could verify the above results. It was found, however, that ESR spectroscopy was not suitable for the detection of irradiated dried onion and garlic.

Identification of Irradiated Food Additives by Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL) Method (Photostimulated Luminescence (PSL) 방법에 의한 국내 유통 분말형 식품가공원료의 방사선 조사 여부 모니터링)

  • Yun, Hyejeong;Hur, Jungmu;Yang, Suhyung;Lee, Byoung-Hun;Kwon, Joong-Ho;Kim, Dongho
    • Journal of Radiation Industry
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.27-34
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    • 2008
  • Photostimulated luminescence (PSL), electron spin resonance (ESR) and thermoluminescence (TL) analyses were conducted to detect whether 258 kinds of extracted and powdered forms food additives were irradiated or not. In a view of the PSL results, 9 kinds of the extracted and powdered samples (3.2%) showed over 5,000 photon counts $(60sec)^{-1}$ and these samples were judged to be irradiation-positive. Thirty nine kinds of the samples (15.6%) yielded 700~5,000 photon counts $(60sec)^{-1}$ and these samples were grouped into irradiation-potential, while the samples showed below 700 photon counts $(60sec)^{-1}$ sec were judged to be irradiation-negative. TL glow curves for minerals separated from 5 samples were detected at $150^{\circ}C$ with high intensity. However, TL analysis did not apply to other irradiation-positive and irradiation-potential samples because the minerals for TL detection were not separated from the samples. ESR measurements for irradiation-positive and irradiation-potential samples, judged by PSL detection, showed no specific signals to irradiation. The results indicated that PSL could be applied to identify irradiation treatment of extracted and powdered food additives, while TL was optional and ESR was not suitable for detection extracted and powdered food additives.

Monitoring of Commercial Red Pepper Powders for Their Irradiation Status (물리적 확인시험법을 이용한 시판 유통 중인 고춧가루의 방사선 조사여부 판별 모니터링)

  • Jeong, Mi-Seon;Ahn, Jae-Jun;Akram, Kashif;Kim, Gui-Ran;Kim, Hyun-Ku;Kwon, Joong-Ho
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.44 no.6
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    • pp.673-679
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    • 2012
  • Ten commercially available red pepper powders were investigated using photostimulated-luminescence (PSL), thermoluminescence (TL) and electron spin resonance (ESR) analyses to confirm their irradiation status. The application of PSL, TL, and ESR analyses was also confirmed by in-house irradiation. In PSL-based screening, all samples gave negative photon counts (<700 PCs). The PSL calibration dose (1 kGy) showed a low sensitivity of 4 samples, while the others provided reliable screening results. TL glow curves demonstrated maximum peaks after $250^{\circ}C$ for the 6 samples; however 4 samples gave complex TL glow curves with maximum peaks in the range of $185-260^{\circ}C$ (radiation-specific), which could be the effect of an irradiated component in low concentration as the TL ratios of all samples were <0.1. Radiation-specific ESR features were absent in the all commercial samples. Variable irradiation detection properties were found; where the TL analysis showed the possible presence of an irradiated component in 4 samples requiring further monitoring and investigation.