Skip to Main Content

Team to develop super-repellent surfaces for safer fruits, vegetables

Illustration: Anne Fu, Research Communications

Texas A&M AgriLife Research and the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station (TEES) received a grant recently from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture to study and develop super-repellent and anti-fouling surfaces for foods.  

The grant will be used in their interdisciplinary collaboration to help ensure the safety of fresh food products, benefiting both consumers and the produce industry.

“There is a need to reduce those outbreaks associated with microbial contamination that may take place in different operations along the fresh produce chain,” said Luis Cisneros-Zevallos, professor, Department of Horticulture Sciences, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, AgriLife Research food scientist and co-principal investigator for the project. “The surfaces we are designing avoid cross-contamination and reduce the risk of biofilm formation.”

“In recent years, we have developed various types of nanotechnology-based coating with an intriguing combination of surface texture and chemistry to inhibit and prevent the attachment of microorganisms on plastics, metals, ceramic and glass at the laboratory scale,” said Mustafa Akbulut, associate professor, Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, TEES chemical engineer and principal investigator for the project.

“With this project, we will design novel coatings, which are specifically tailored for the food industry and also suitable for large-scale production and application to achieve a broad impact on relevant stakeholders,” Akbulut said.  

Food safety outbreaks in recent years have caused illnesses and deaths among consumers, negatively affecting the fresh produce industry on a large scale.

After observing the natural morphology and chemistry of rice leaves which have hydrophobic super-repellent characteristics, the team was inspired to create novel surfaces that mimicked leaves’ ability to reduce the attachment of microorganisms.

“Bioinspiration is key when it comes to using nanotechnology strategies, specifically when you want to provide surfaces with unique characteristics of polarity and morphology,” Akbulut said.

The interdisciplinary research team also includes Texas A&M food microbiologists Matthew Taylor and Alejandro Castillo, associate professors, Department of Animal Science, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

“Our team is a pioneer in this area, in the U.S. and worldwide,” Cisneros-Zevallos said. “We certainly believe that it will transform the way the fresh produce industry operates, and we hope the industry will adopt many of the products our project will develop in the next few years of the grant.”