Food industry

Food additive (645)
Food companies (64)
Food consumption (16)
Food industry (34)
Food manufacturer (6)
Food preservation (5)
Food processing (29)
Food production (24)
Food quality (5)
Food safety (23)
Food supply (17)
Genetically designed food (7)

Synopsis: Domenii: Food & beverages industry: Food & beverages industry generale: Food industry:


BBC 00111.txt

that they use land and water that would be used better for food production. The car also has hybrid technology with regenerative brakes.


biosciencetechnology.com 2012 00001533.txt

And those are names that will be reporting quarterly numbers including Zales Jewelers that will be one to watch as well as Heinz and Payless Shoe store Parent

And Heinz we've already got the glimpse from at the CEO yesterday just talking about emerging markets and growth there for the catsup company.

So Heinz looking like one to watch certainly and sounding like they have some good news ahead for us.


bloomberg.com 2014 000091.txt

Last week, China's Bright Food Group finally reached a preliminary agreement to buy a majority stake in Israel's largest foodmaker, Tnuva Food industries, for an estimated $1 billion.


earthtechling.com 2014 0000473.txt

BMW i3 carbon fiber reinforced plastic passenger cell; Ford 1. 0-liter Ecoboost engine; Honda accord plug-in powertrain;


ec.europa.eu 2015 0000423.txt

and Danone to introduce PEF to replace petrochemical based alternatives. The collaboration programmes which continue the development of PEF


ec.europa.eu 2015 0000435.txt

where they can be used as thickeners or emulsifiers, and the health and pharmaceuticals sectors. Back to that ketchup and blood comparison:


ec.europa.eu 2015 0000527.txt

says Karl-Heinz Spitzer, one of the project leaders. Manganese is crucial for the alloy, increasing depth of hardening and improving strength and toughness by up to three times.


edition.cnn.com_TECH 2015 000052.txt

Nevertheless, the company is working with major food manufacturers to create prepackaged plastic capsules that can just be loaded into the machine to make food,


edition.cnn.com_TECH 2015 00259.txt.txt

Pepper has already been used to sell Nestle coffee machines in Japanese stores. Interested in buying your own Pepper robot?


edition.cnn.com_TECH 2015 00297.txt.txt

vitamins and antioxidants and contains a high percentage of protein, could be the answer we're all looking for,


environmentalleader.com 2014 0000130.txt

For instance, Danone and Nestle are active in Indonesia, where the governments wants to double the number of dairy cows by 2020.


environmentalleader.com 2014 000014.txt

#Nestle JLL Levi's Among 223 Companies Supporting the Clean Power Plan More than 200 companies, including Nestlé, JLL,


environmentalleader.com 2014 000032.txt

Patagonia and Stella Mccartney, have committed to eliminate their use of fabrics that contain endangered forest fiber;

or non-wood fibers like straw i


environmentalleader.com 2014 000046.txt

#Google Facebook Others Launch Sustainability Platform Unilever Coca-cola Google Facebook Nike Pepsico and dozens of other major companies and nonprofits have launched a digital sustainability platform

intended to drive conversation and action on sustainability. The companies say the nonprofit editorial platform called Collectively aims to#make sustainable living the new normal.#

Unilever BT Group Coca-cola Marks & spencer and Carlsberg came together to sponsor Collectively in response to discussions at the World Economic Forum about how to inspire

They have since been joined by more than 20 other leading multinational companies including Diageo General mills Johnson & johnson Mcdonalds Microsoft Nestl

Earlier this week 57 global companies funds and associations including Unilever Ikea Royal dutch shell and Coca-cola Enterprises signed a letter to support a#robust#2030 energy


futurity_medicine 00015.txt

In addition to being used as an antibiotic in medicine it may also be possible to use copsin in the food industry as well.


futurity_medicine 00032.txt

and made up of long fibers that can be cross-linked together. The teamâ#has been maintaining native cartilage in the lab


futurity_medicine 00201.txt

The biomedical use of a food additive a material widely used in the food industry for its gelling thickening and stabilizing properties as a medium for a drug-delivery system is a novel idea


futurity_medicine 00259.txt

The new method spins the drug into silklike fibers that quickly dissolve when in contact with moisture, releasing higher doses of the drug than possible with other topical materials such as gels or creams

showing that the fiber materials can hold 10 times the concentration of medicine as anti-HIV gels currently under development.

Ball says. e have achieved higher drug loading in our material such that you wouldn need to insert a large amount of these fibers to deliver enough of the drug to be helpful.

SPINNING THE FABRIC The team created the soft fibers using a process called electrospinning. They first dissolved a polymer

so the researchers looked at different ingredients for the fiber that would allow for the highest concentration of drug with the fastest-possible release in the body.

Because the electrically spun fibers have a large surface area, researchers were able to create samples in

By adjusting the ingredients in the fibers, researchers were able to dissolve the drug in about six minutes,

no matter how much drug mass was in the fiber. The research team says the soft, dissolving fibers could be rolled into a cardboard tampon applicator for insertion or built into the shape of a vaginal ring,

similar to those used for contraception. The material can accommodate different anti-HIV drugs and the team is testing several others for effectiveness.


futurity_medicine 00596.txt

The Heinz C. Prechter Bipolar Research Fund, the Steven M. Schwartzberg Memorial Fund, and the Joshua Judson Stern Foundation supported the work u


futurity_sci_tech 00020.txt

In addition to being used as an antibiotic in medicine it may also be possible to use copsin in the food industry as well.


futurity_sci_tech 00048.txt

#This sticky process builds collagen fibers Rice university rightoriginal Studyposted by Mike Williams-Rice on October 28 2014new research offers a detailed look at how synthetic collagen fibers self-assemble via their sticky ends.

or as scaffolding in regenerative medicine Two papers in the Journal of the American Chemical Society the first published in May and the second this month show precisely how mimetic peptides developed at Rice may be aligned to form helices with sticky ends that allow them to aggregate into fibers

and fibers start forminghartgerink says. s soon as you have a fiber NMR doesn t work any more.

and synthesized a series of peptides with large sticky ends that drive fiber assemblyhartgerink says.

but different arrangements and showed those with extensive sticky ends quickly self-assembled into fibers.

when you use charged pairs properly you get fibers. And when you don t you don t get fibers. nderstanding the fine details of collagen assembly presents the possibility of synthetic collagens for specific functions Hartgerink says. number of biomaterials use natural collagen

and there are advantages to replacing them with synthetic collagenshe says. ne of the main advantages is that we move away from health


futurity_sci_tech 00070.txt

The experimental system that the researchers used consists of two tiny directly coupled silica microtoroid (doughnut-shaped) resonators each coupled to a different fiber-taper coupler that aids in guiding light from a laser diode to photodetectors;

the fiber is tapered in the middle so that light can between the fibers and the resonators. Yang says the concept will work in any coupled physical system.

Loss is delivered to one of the microresonators by a tiny device a chromium-coated silica nanotip


futurity_sci_tech 00087.txt

They followed fibers from the hippocampus to specific cells in the cortex and showed that turning off other cells in the hippocampus did not affect retrieval of that memory. he cortex can t do it alone it needs input from the hippocampuswiltgen says. his has been a fundamental assumption in our field for a long time


futurity_sci_tech 00133.txt

but if you put in the middle another step then you can easily walk up. he addition of PID2 caused the polymer blend to form fibers

The fibers serve as a pathway to allow electrons to travel to the electrodes on the sides of the solar cell. t s like you re generating a street


futurity_sci_tech 00138.txt

#How to make carbon thread without clumps Made into fibers single-walled carbon nanotubesâ line up like a fistful of raw spaghetti noodles thanks to a new process.

The tricky bit according to Rice university chemist Angel Martã is keeping the densely packed nanotubes apart before they re drawn together into a fiber.

Earlier research at Rice by chemist and chemical engineer Matteo Pasquali a coauthor of the new paper used an acid dissolution process to keep the nanotubes separated until they could be spun into fibers.

The tubes are forced ultimately together into fibers when they are extruded through the tip of a needle.

continuous fiber on the Pasquali lab s equipment. The strength and stiffness of the neat fibers also approached that of the fibers previously produced with Pasquali s acid-based process. e didn t make any modifications to his system

and it worked perfectlymartã says. The hair-width fibers can be woven into thicker cables and the team is investigating ways to improve their electrical properties through doping the nanotubes with iodide. he research is basically analogous to

what Matteo doesmartã says. e used his tools but gave the process a spin with a different preparation so now we re the first to make neat fibers of pure carbon nanotube electrolytes.

That s very cool. asquali says that the spinning system worked with little need for adaptation


futurity_sci_tech 00144.txt

In the US the virus greatest economic impact is in the cattle industry because it is bigger than the domestic sheep industry


futurity_sci_tech 00302.txt

#Stretchy, bendy, stronger-than-ever graphene fiber Researchers have created a simple and scalable method of making strong,

For instance, removing oxygen from the graphene oxide fiber results in a fiber with high electrical conductivity. Adding silver nanorods to the graphene film would increase the conductivity to the same as copper,

much better than other carbon fibers, says Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics, chemistry and materials science and engineering,

Penn State. e believe that pockets of air inside the fiber keep it from being brittle.

and wound on itself with an automatic fiber scroller, resulting in a fiber that can be knotted

and stretched without fracturing. The researchers reported their results in a recent issue of ACSNANO. he importance is that we can do almost any material,


futurity_sci_tech 00324.txt

and turns the neat trick of converting gaseous carbon dioxide into solid polymer chains that nestle in the pores. obody s ever seen a mechanism like thistour says. ou ve got to have that nucleophile (the sulfur


futurity_sci_tech 00747.txt

Earlier research found a way last year to make GQDS from relatively cheap carbon fiber

The dots are water-soluble and early tests have shown them to be nontoxic offering the promise that GQDS may serve as effective antioxidants Tour says.


futurity_sci_tech 00866.txt

Metal tanks that can handle natural gas under pressure are often much heavier than the automakers would like. e says the material could help to solve longstanding problems in food packaging too. emember


futurity_sci_tech 00892.txt

In the new design photons are applied to an outer ring of the spiraled resonator with a tiny light-dispensing optic fiber;


futurity_sci_tech 01069.txt

or ultrastrong composites that could replace carbon fiber. Or, the researchers speculate, a science fiction idea of a space elevator that could connect an orbiting satellite to Earth by a long cord that might consist of sheets of CVD graphene,


futurity_sci_tech 01078.txt

The carbon fiber shell of the aerial vehicles is wafer-thin but resilient. With proper funding the vehicles could be tested in a real-world hurricane in two or three years.


futurity_sci_tech 01093.txt

#To measure this movement the researchers used a fiber interferometer. A fiber optic cable pointed upward at this system bounces light off the underside of the silicon nitride layer enabling the researchers to determine how far the structure has bent upwards.#


gizmag.com 2015 0000139.txt

It's an odorless tasteless substance that's classified as a harmless food additive by the US Food and Drug Administration.


gizmag.com 2015 000045.txt

disc-like head holding up to 16 spools of various types of carbon-fiber ribbons. This allows ISAAC to not only swap quickly between materials,

The idea is that the ribbons are made up of partially cured resins mixed with carbon fibers.


impactlab.net 2015 000063.txt

Over a period of 25 years, between 1955 and 1980, more than 50 corporations left New york city, including IBM, Gulf Oil, Texaco, Union carbide, General Telephone, Xerox, Pepsico and U s. Tobacco.


impactlab_2011 01830.txt

#FTC Proposes Stricter Guidelines on Food Ads for Children The Federal trade commission has proposed sweeping new guidelines that could push the food industry to overhaul how it advertises cereal, soda pop, snacks, restaurant meals and other foods to children.

a trade group that represents marketers like Kraft foods and Campbell soup. By explicitly tying advertising to childhood obesity,

food companies spent nearly $2. 3 billion to advertise to children. The food industry immediately criticized the proposal,

saying that it had taken already significant steps to improve recipes and change the way it advertises to children.

Kellogg, the company that makes Froot Loops said in a statement that it would review the proposal

Many food companies participate in an industry-led effort, the Children Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative,


impactlab_2011 02662.txt

#New Traceability Rule Represents Major Adjustment for U s. Food industry In response to a new federal food safety law and growing consumer interest,

A provision of the federal food safety law passed last year requires that all players in the country food supply chain be able to quickly trace from

one step backtraceability requirement for processed food and produce is designed to make it easier for the Food and Drug Administration to identify the source of an outbreak of foodborne illness,

and swiftly remove it from the food supply. The new requirement represents a major adjustment for some parts of the nation food system

a task complicated by a lengthy food supply chain where tomatoes might change hands five times from farm to store.

Segments of the food industry have been required since 2005 to be able to trace ne step forward, one step back,


impactlab_2013 00040.txt

##which we now suspect to be related a fiber affair##American technology companies#freaked out. Google, Microsoft, Apple and others appeared utterly complicit with the NSA,

#However, even if it turns out they were entirely ignorant of the NSA s fiber-tapping ways,


impactlab_2013 00050.txt

Antioxidants, folic acid, and B vitamins are harmful or ineffective for chronic disease prevention, and further large prevention trials are justified no longer##With respect to multivitamins,


impactlab_2013 00114.txt

Affectiva s clients include Unilever, Mars and Coca-cola. The advertising research agency Millward Brown#says it has used Affectiva s technology to test about 3, 000 ads for clients.


impactlab_2013 00125.txt

slide the carbon fiber frame thought the paper s cleave and attach the crash-proof bumper/battery pack to the front.


impactlab_2013 00129.txt

First, the 3-D printer would build a carbon fiber truss structure that would act as a frame for the system.


impactlab_2013 00131.txt

Its frame is created from carbon fiber to keep the aircraft lightweight and It seats two people.


impactlab_2013 00140.txt

#Ristroph glued together several tubes of carbon fiber to build this: a sphere with four wings attached to it that propels it as a jellyfish swims.


impactlab_2013 00188.txt

cotton or other fibers are extruded seamlessly to form layers of a breathable fabric, ideal for usage in sportswear, bandages and undergarments.


impactlab_2013 00231.txt

substituting a super capacitor made from advanced carbon fiber-based nanomaterials that can be integrated into the body panels of the vehicle.


impactlab_2014 00010.txt

and other speciesrequires immediate attention to ensure the sustainability of our food production systems, avoid additional economic impact on the agricultural sector,


impactlab_2014 00063.txt

And we need to incorporate zero waste and low energy technologies into the task of food production. What can achieve the intensification of food supply we require,

but in a way that is also sustainable and less harmful to the environment? There is an urgent need to develop new methods for sustainable food production.

properly designed and planned, could provide the sustainable means to improve food supply we need. Ideally, urban agriculture fits neatly alongside


impactlab_2014 00150.txt

often mixed with carbon fibers to form composites. Some 50%of the new Airbus a350 jet, for example, will be made from composites.


impactlab_2014 00170.txt

and food consumption and wondering whether or not the 20 minute brisk walk to work would drop my blood sugar in 2 hours!


impactlab_2014 00328.txt

letting go of the dirt on their fibers. Next, it swaps to dirt-magnet mode,


impactlab_2014 00353.txt

Food Genetically designed food: The creation of entirely new strains of food animals and plants in order to better address biological and physiological needs.

A departure from genetically modified food, genetically designed food would be engineered from the ground up. Scientifically viable in 2016;


insidehpc.com 2015 00006.txt

including the EDR 100gb/s Switch-IB Infiniband switch and Linkx 100gb/s copper and fiber cables


livescience_2013 04910.txt

and by 2050 food production must increase by at least 70 percent to keep pace. Unfortunately about half of the world's food is consumed never due to inefficiencies in the harvesting storage and delivery of crops.

Certainly weather-related events like the current and long-lasting drought in portions of the U s. add further complexity to the science of farming as resultant crop damage food supply shortages


livescience_2014 02488.txt

Figures from the U s. Department of agriculture and the National Agricultural Statistics Service show that our meat consumption is at its lowest level in years.

This is the result of countless people choosing to reduce their meat consumption and participating in efforts like Meatless Monday becoming flexitarian or


mnn.com 2014 0000184.txt

and the silk protein is extracted from natural silk fibers. Like the leaves of a plant, the material requires only exposure to sunlight and a small amount of water to produce oxygen."


mnn.com 2014 0000378.txt

for the research because it naturally produces biofilms that contain so-called"curli fibers, "which are amyloid proteins that attach to surfaces.

The fibers were modified by adding peptides that can capture select nonliving materials. In this case, the researchers chose peptides that could capture gold nanoparticles and quantum dots.


mnn.com 2014 000041.txt

along with local grocery stores and food manufacturers is treated annually at Bristol sewage treatment works located in the suburb of Avonmouth.


mnn.com 2014 0000442.txt

The fiber muscles can lift 100 times as much as human muscles of the same length

or even to make clothing with fibers that expand or contract to keep the wearer cool or warm.

The twisted fiber creates an artificial muscle that can drive a heavy rotor at a speed of more than 10000 revolutions per minute.

when they twisted the fiber even more it produced coiling as happens when you over-twist a rubber band.

The fiber muscles could be used to power the muscles in androids or exoskeletons the researchers said.

In the case of robotic muscles electrical energy not temperature change would drive the contraction of fibers.

The coiled fibers would simply expand when the air temperature warms to let the clothing breathe.

By contrast the fiber muscles are inexpensive to make and easy to commercialize Baughman said.


mnn.com 2014 0000484.txt

Our electronic whiskers consist of high-aspect-ratio elastic fibers coated with conductive composite films of nanotubes and nanoparticles.

and silver nanoparticles that are patterned on high-aspect-ratio elastic fibers. The nanotubes provide both flexibility allowing the whiskers to bend


neurogadget.com 2015 00005.txt

#MIT's multifunctional fiber implant could revolutionize neural prosthetics Today cutting edge neural implants can passively read brain activity,

so what new tricks do these fibers bring to the table? Flexible: these fiber based neural implants are much more flexible than the current industry standard, multielectrode arrays and hooked eedlestyle stimulators.

The brain itself is composed of some of the softest tissue in the body, so harder implants that don bend with their surrounding biological environment can easily shift

or chemical, they are so small that several fibers can be bundled together in a customized cable designed for the area it is designed to interface with.

The most exciting thing about these new fibers is undoubtedly the ability to bundle together different functionalities in the same implant,

Scientists at MIT Bioelectronics group not as interested in creating applications for these new multifunctional fibers as they are in perfecting the technology,


newsoffice 00127.txt

The material is produced commonly in reels of very thin straight fiber. To transform the fiber into coils Holschuh borrowed a technique from another MIT group that previously used coiled nickel-titanium to engineer a heat-activated robotic worm.

Shape-memory alloys like nickel-titanium can essentially be trained to return to an original shape in response to a certain temperature.

To train the material Holschuh first wound raw SMA fiber into extremely tight millimeter-diameter coils then heated the coils to 450 degrees Celsius to set them into an original or trained shape.

However at a certain trigger temperature (in this case as low as 60 C) the fiber will begin to spring back to its trained tightly coiled state.


newsoffice 00202.txt

Today the startup is attracting some big-name clients including Kellogg and Unilever. Backed by more than $20 million in funding the startup


newsoffice 00213.txt

and fiber says Teradiode cofounder and vice president Robin Huang a former Lincoln Laboratory researcher and Terablade co-inventor.

and fiber that first transfer energy from diode lasers into a medium usually a crystal before converting it into a laser beam.


newsoffice 00239.txt

To break down those emulsions crews use de-emulsifiers which can themselves be environmentally damaging. In the 2010 Deepwater horizon oil spill in the Gulf of mexico for example large amounts of dispersants and de-emulsifiers were dumped into the sea.

After a while the oil just disappeared Varanasi says but people know it s hidden in the water in these fine emulsions.


newsoffice 00402.txt

because it naturally produces biofilms that contain so-called curli fibers amyloid proteins that help E coli attach to surfaces.

Each curli fiber is made from a repeating chain of identical protein subunits called Csga which can be modified by adding protein fragments called peptides.

By programming cells to produce different types of curli fibers under certain conditions the researchers were able to control the biofilms properties

This puts control of curli fiber production in the hands of the researchers who can adjust the amount of AHL in the cells environment.

which forms curli fibers that coalesce into a biofilm coating the surface where the bacteria are growing.

If both are present the film will contain a mix of tagged and untagged fibers.

To add quantum dots to the curli fibers the researchers engineered cells that produce curli fibers

along with the bacteria that produce histidine-tagged fibers resulting in a material that contains both quantum dots and gold nanoparticles.


newsoffice 00407.txt

According to Tim Lu, an assistant professor of electrical engineering and biological engineering at MIT, it boils down to the inefficient bacteria-detection assays used in the food industry.

along with costly recalls for food producers. But the assay simplicity should also promote better sanitation practices

and obviously not ideal for the food industry. All these improvements contribute to the assay speed,

where biofilms build up in pipelines before seeing firsthand that the food industry as in desperate need of new detection technologies.

Most food manufacturers were still using traditional assays, Lu says, with some still using pen and paper or spreadsheets to track contamination hich makes it nearly impossible to gather large amounts of data,

In an incubator at the University of Massachusetts at Boston, the renamed Sample6 tailored the product for the food industry before relocating to its current headquarters in Boston Seaport District,

and is used solely by the food industry. But it a platform technology, Lu says, that can be used to detect other pathogenic bacteria,


newsoffice 00415.txt

These particles are very strong antioxidants that scavenge oxygen radicals and other highly reactive molecules produced by light


newsoffice 00594.txt

And the ground receiver is based on arrays of small inexpensive telescopes that are coupled fiber to highly efficient superconducting nanowires a photon counting technology that was brought to its high state of maturity by joint MIT and Lincoln Lab teams.


newsoffice.mit.edu 2015 000042.txt

#New fibers can deliver many simultaneous stimuli The human brain complexity makes it extremely challenging to study not only because of its sheer size,

By producing complex multimodal fibers that could be less than the width of a hair, they have created a system that could deliver optical signals and drugs directly into the brain,

In addition to transmitting different kinds of signals, the new fibers are made of polymers that closely resemble the characteristics of neural tissues,

To do that, her team made use of novel fiber-fabrication technology pioneered by MIT professor of materials science

Flexible fiber-based probes The result, Anikeeva explains, is the fabrication of polymer fibers hat are soft and flexible

and look more like natural nerves. Devices currently used for neural recording and stimulation, she says,

called a preform, of the desired arrangement of channels within the fiber: optical waveguides to carry light, hollow tubes to carry drugs,

and drawn into a thin fiber, while retaining the exact arrangement of features within them.

A single draw of the fiber reduces the cross-section of the material 200-fold, and the process can be repeated,

making the fibers thinner each time and approaching nanometer scale. During this process, Anikeeva says, eatures that used to be inches across are now microns.

Combining the different channels in a single fiber she adds, could enable precision mapping of neural activity,

While a single preform a few inches long can produce hundreds of feet of fiber, the materials must be selected carefully so they all soften at the same temperature.

The fibers could ultimately be used for precision mapping of the responses of different regions of the brain or spinal cord,

diverse collection of multifunctional fibers, tailored for insertion into the brain where they can stimulate


newsoffice.mit.edu 2015 00779.txt.txt

as the electrodes in tiny supercapacitors (which are essentially pairs of electrically conducting fibers with an insulator between).

onvincingly demonstrates the impressive performance of niobium-based fiber supercapacitors. The team also included Phd student Mehr Negar Mirvakili and professors Peter Englezos and John Madden, all from the University of British columbia s


newsoffice.mit.edu 2015 00822.txt.txt

and approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a food additive, and polylactic acid, a biodegradable plastic used in compostable cups and glassware.


phys.org 2015 000043.txt

so stabilizers such as polyvinyl alcohol are added. Unfortunately, these stabilizers tend to shield the surface of the palladium particles,

which reduces their effectiveness as a catalyst. By introducing additional treatments, Yingnan Zhao has managed to fully expose the catalytic surface once again


phys.org 2015 000051.txt

a new type of nanoscale surface that bacteria can't stick to holds promise for applications in the food processing, medical and even shipping industries.

Finding low-cost solutions to limiting bacterial attachments is key, especially in biomedical and food processing applications."

"The food industry makes products with low profit margins, "said Moraru.""Unless a technology is affordable it doesn't stand the chance of being applied practically."


< Back - Next >


Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011