Development of smart food packaging from bread waste-derived starch and carbon quantum dots
Journal article, 2025

This study explores an innovative approach to transforming leftover bread, a major source of food waste, into eco-friendly packaging materials. Using the ultrasound-assisted hydrothermal method and a chemical-free approach, carbon quantum dots (QDs) and starch (ST) were derived from leftover bread. Smart films were then developed by blending ST, glycerol, and QDs (1 % or 3 wt% of ST) and alizarin (AL), using solvent casting. QDs exhibited UV-barrier, photoluminescent, antioxidant activity (79.13 % DPPH radical scavenging), and low toxicity to murine fibroblasts below 200 mu g/mL. Their inclusion improved film plasticity, increased elongation by 59 %, enhanced the water vapor barrier, and raised surface hydrophobicity. The films showed antibacterial effects, inhibiting E. coli by 47.77 % and S. aureus by 97.82 %. Interactions between QDs and AL led to a reduced visual color change in the colorimetric films in response to ammonia and acetic acid vapors; however, they enhanced the films' fluorescent properties. This study introduces a sustainable biorefinery strategy to upcycle bread waste into smart packaging, reducing waste and contributing to food spoilage monitoring.

Waste valorization

Intelligent packaging

Green manufacturing

Sustainability

Sensors

Author

Zeinab Qazanfarzadeh

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Helder Baptista

University of Aveiro

Claudia Nunes

University of Aveiro

Vignesh Kumaravel

Lodz University of Technology

Industrial Crops and Products

0926-6690 (ISSN)

Vol. 233 121426

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Materials Chemistry

Food Science

Polymer Technologies

DOI

10.1016/j.indcrop.2025.121426

More information

Latest update

7/26/2025