Thermoluminescence properties and identification of irradiated cocoa beans during long-term storage

I. B. Lozano, J. Roman-Lopez, J. E. Tenopala, H. Piña-González, J. I. Guzman-Castañeda, J. A.I. Diaz-Gongora

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This work reports on the thermoluminescence (TL) properties and detection of contaminating minerals isolated from Mexican cocoa beans irradiated with gamma radiation and stored for 4 years. Contaminating minerals isolated from cocoa beans consisting of quartz, diopside, plagioclase, albite, and iron oxide with irregular and rectangular grains and average length of 135 μm. Cocoa beans are detected as irradiated even after 4 years of storage using the shape and maximum temperature of the TL glow curve of contaminating minerals. The TL properties of dose-response, and fading of minerals were also analysed. The TL dose-response is linear from 5 to 100 Gy, supra-linear between 250 and 1000 Gy, and sub-linear above 1500 Gy. Based on the TL1/TL2 ratio the minerals are identified as irradiated from 250 Gy to 4500 Gy in the dose-response test and after different storage times in the darkness at room temperature. A continuum trap distribution can be associated with the TL glow curve of minerals using the Tm-Tstop method. First order kinetic peaks were used in the Glow Curve Deconvolution of natural and irradiated (1 and 10 kGy) TL curves.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110532
JournalApplied Radiation and Isotopes
Volume191
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Gamma radiation
  • Mexican cocoa beans
  • Thermoluminescence

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