Aluminium release from food packaging Original paper

Researched by:

  • Dr. Umar Aitsaam ID
    Dr. Umar Aitsaam

    User avatarClinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

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January 30, 2026

Researched by:

  • Dr. Umar Aitsaam ID
    Dr. Umar Aitsaam

    User avatarClinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

    Read More
Dr. Umar Aitsaam

Clinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

What was studied

This work examined aluminium release from food packaging and other uncoated aluminium food-contact materials under realistic and worst-case use conditions, with the intent of aligning measured release with European health-based guidance and regulatory-style release limits. The presentation compiles an exposure context (dietary aluminium intake and the EFSA tolerable weekly intake), then focuses on experimentally measured aluminium migration from common consumer items (notably espresso makers and aluminium foil dishes) using food simulants and benchmark foods. A second emphasis is how test design choices (simulant selection, temperature, repeated use/cleaning such as dishwashing) can materially change observed release, which directly affects compliance decisions when specific release limits (SRLs) are applied in certification or regulatory frameworks.

Who was studied

No human participants were enrolled; the “subjects” were materials and use scenarios relevant to consumer exposure. The primary tested articles were uncoated aluminium espresso makers (multiple pots/kettles) evaluated across repeated release events using test water and coffee, including the effect of dishwasher cleaning. Uncoated aluminium foil dishes were tested for aluminium and thallium (Tl) release using several acidic and non-acidic media (including citric acid and lactic acid simulants, and benchmark foods such as tomato purée and applesauce mixtures) at elevated temperatures and defined contact times. The presentation also references population-level exposure estimates (adults and children) and a regional enforcement/complaint scenario involving lye-baked products (pretzels/rolls) where aluminium concentrations in foods were frequently found above typical expectations, providing a practical context for why controlling additional migration from food-contact materials matters.

Most important findings

Across tested scenarios, aluminium migration was strongly driven by food chemistry, heat, and repeated-use/cleaning practices, and several conditions produced releases that approach or exceed an SRL-style benchmark. For a heavy metal certification program, the most actionable message is that pass/fail outcomes can depend on whether testing mirrors the intended use (food type, time/temperature, reuse, and cleaning), and whether the SRL chosen is demonstrably achievable under “foreseeable conditions of use,” with clear consumer-facing use restrictions when necessary.

Critical pointDetails
Dietary intake already consumes much of the tolerable intakeA tolerable weekly intake of 1 mg Al/kg bw/week is cited, with estimated exposures spanning roughly 0.2–1.5 mg/kg bw/week in adults and 0.7–2.3 mg/kg bw/week in children, implying many consumers may already be near or above the health-based benchmark before food-contact migration is added.
SRLs provide a practical compliance target but must be achievableA specific release limit (SRL) of 5 mg Al/kg food is presented as achievable under an ALARA rationale, while broader SRLs for multiple elements (including Pb, Cd, As, Hg, Tl, Ni, Cr, etc.) are referenced to frame multi-metal control expectations for metal/alloy food-contact articles.
Espresso makers: early-use release can exceed an SRL line; dishwashing changes outcomesIn repeated release testing, several early cycles for aluminium espresso makers show aluminium release values above a 5 mg/kg reference line, and the slide-level conclusion states dishwashers should not be used for cleaning, indicating cleaning practices can materially increase risk of non-compliance and consumer exposure.
Foil dishes: acidic simulants often yield higher aluminium than benchmark foodsFor foil dishes, citric acid and lactic acid frequently produce higher aluminium release than benchmark foods; a specific conclusion is that citric acid can overestimate release compared with tomato purée, meaning conservative simulants may misclassify products unless justified by intended use.
Thallium behaves differently from aluminium and can be higher in real foodsThallium release patterns differ: the presentation notes higher Tl release in benchmark foods in some comparisons, and kinetic plots show rapid early release followed by a saturation tendency, highlighting the need to control impurities/trace contaminants in aluminium articles, not only aluminium itself.
Time/temperature kinetics matter for certification test conditionsAluminium release from foil dishes shows a lag time followed by linear increase, while Tl shows more immediate release then approaches saturation; additionally, aluminium release is described as doubling with every 10°C increase, making temperature selection a dominant determinant of measured migration.

Key implications

For a heavy metal certification program, aluminium release from food packaging should be evaluated against SRL-style criteria using test conditions that match foreseeable use, because conservative simulants and elevated temperatures can over- or under-estimate real-food exposure, affecting regulatory alignment and certification fairness. Certification requirements should explicitly address acidic/alkaline/salty foods, maximum time–temperature, reuse, and cleaning instructions, since dishwashing and heating materially change migration. Industry applications include product design (coatings, alloy/impurity control for Tl and other metals), validated labeling, and lot-based quality control to maintain SRL compliance. Research gaps include harmonized simulant-to-food translation and standardized kinetic protocols for repeated use. Practical recommendations include pairing simulant tests with benchmark foods for high-risk uses and requiring consumer-facing restrictions where safe use depends on conditions.

Citation

Merkel S. Aluminium release from food packaging. Presented at: 3rd meeting, FIP FCM Network; May 24–26, 2016. Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR).

Aluminum (Al)

Aluminum is a pervasive metal found in a wide range of consumer products, from food packaging and cookware to medications and personal care items. Although often overlooked, aluminum exposure can accumulate over time, posing long-term health risks, especially to vulnerable populations like infants, children, and individuals with kidney conditions.

Heavy Metals

Heavy metals are high-density elements that accumulate in the body and environment, disrupting biological processes. Lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury, nickel, tin, aluminum, and chromium are of greatest concern due to persistence, bioaccumulation, and health risks, making them central to the HMTC program’s safety standards.