Q.67 Which of the following radiation methods is used in preserving food from spoilage by
microorganisms?
(A) Radio waves (B) Microwaves (C) Non–ionizing (D) Ionizing
Ionizing radiation effectively preserves food by destroying spoilage microorganisms through DNA damage and ionization without significantly heating the product.
Option Analysis
Radio waves (A): Radio waves have low energy and long wavelengths, failing to penetrate food or disrupt microbial cells, so they serve no role in microbial inactivation for preservation.
Microwaves (B): Microwaves heat food by agitating water molecules, which can cook or pasteurize superficially but do not reliably sterilize against all microbes and cause uneven preservation.
Non-ionizing (C): Non-ionizing radiation like UV or infrared lacks sufficient energy to ionize atoms or deeply penetrate food, limiting it to surface treatments ineffective against internal spoilage.
Ionizing (D): Correct choice—gamma rays, X-rays, or electron beams ionize water molecules, producing free radicals that break microbial DNA, enzymes, and proteins, achieving cold sterilization at doses of 1-50 kGy.
Ionizing radiation stands out as the proven method for preserving food from spoilage by microorganisms, targeting pathogens like Salmonella and spoilage bacteria without compromising quality.
How Ionizing Radiation Works
This process exposes food to high-energy sources such as cobalt-60 gamma rays, electron beams, or X-rays, which ionize water to form reactive oxygen species that damage microbial DNA and halt reproduction. Doses vary: low (0.1-1 kGy) for sprouting inhibition, medium (1-10 kGy) for pathogen reduction, and high (>10 kGy) for sterilization.
Benefits Over Alternatives
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Extends shelf life of fruits, meats, and spices while retaining nutrition, taste, and texture.
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Acts as “cold pasteurization,” avoiding heat damage unlike microwaves.
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Penetrates packaging deeply, unlike non-ionizing UV.
| Radiation Type | Energy Level | Food Preservation Effect | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radio waves | Low | None | Communication |
| Microwaves | Moderate | Surface heating only | Cooking |
| Non-ionizing | Low | Surface disinfection | UV light |
| Ionizing | High | Deep microbial kill | Gamma, X-rays |
Regulatory bodies like the FDA approve it for safe use, reducing foodborne illness globally.


