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1.
《Drying Technology》2007,25(7):1275-1280
When using the convective drying method, the mass transfer between drying air and moisture diffusion of the material is very important. The moisture moves inside the material because of the volume change caused by the increased temperature. This movement is additionally affected by the texture of the material. According to the research dealing with colloid capillary porous texture of vegetables and fruit, the humidity migration inside the material occurs in both fluid and steam condition at the same time. This migration is stimulated by the heating and decreasing humidity along with the flow. In this research, winter varieties of apples (Jonathan, Golden Delicious, and Idared) were studied by heating of a 20 × 20 × 20 piece of apple with a thermocouple in it. On the basis of the measurements it can be stated that for the fruits with a high percentage of moisture (75-90%), when making the drying condition, the moisture gradient is influenced by the fractured cells of the cut area. It was found that the variety of apple is very important in relation to the heating and water loss gradient. According to the results, the wet volume change due to the heating highly influences the water loss. The models that describe the temperature of the material have a connection with the water loss.  相似文献   

2.
The moisture diffusivities and moisture transfer coefficients characterising the drying of pharmaceutical powders were determined using a correlation proposed by Dincer et al. (2002, Development of a new drying correlation for practical applications. International Journal of Energy Research 26, 245-251). Experimental moisture content data for lactose, Aspirin and Paracetamol samples dried under convective, microwave, combined convective-microwave and combined vacuum-microwave conditions were obtained. The drying coefficients and lag factors were determined from the experimental measurements and incorporated into the model. The mass transfer Bi numbers were found to be in the range 0.058 to 0.194, indicating the presence of finite internal and external resistances. Moisture diffusivity and diffusion coefficient values in the range 0.135 × 10-9 to 102 × 10-9 m2 s-1 and 0.067 × 10-7 to 8.21 × 10-7 ms-1 respectively, were calculated. The predicted moisture profiles showed adequate agreement with the experimental observations, with the average error between experimental and predicted results being ± 15.9%.  相似文献   

3.
Red oak boards of 76.2 cm (long) × 7.62 cm (wide) × 2.54 cm (thick) were dried from green moisture content (MC) to 7% MC in the hot water vacuum-drying system. These boards were dried at the pressure of 12 mm Hg and the temperatures ranging from 30 to 50°C within 25 to 70 h. Drying rates were measured and drying curves were calculated. The results showed that the drying rate was higher at higher temperatures. The vacuum drying was faster when wood MC was above 30% than when it was less than 30%. The individual samples did not dry at the same drying rates even at the same drying conditions because of anatomical variations between boards.  相似文献   

4.
Estimation of Effective Moisture Diffusivity of Okra for Microwave Drying   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
G  k  e Dadal&#x 《Drying Technology》2007,25(9):1445-1450
The effect of microwave output power and sample amount on effective moisture diffusivity were investigated using microwave drying technique on round okra (Hibiscus esculentus L.). The various microwave output powers ranging from 180 to 900 W were used for the determination of effective moisture diffusivity for constant sample amount of 100 g okra. To examine the effect of sample amount on effective moisture diffusivity, the samples in the range of 25-100 g were dried at constant microwave output power of 360 W. By increasing the microwave output powers and decreasing the sample amounts, the effective moisture diffusivity values ranged from 20.52 × 10-10 to 86.17 × 10-10 and 34.87 × 10-10 to 11.91 × 10-9 m2/s-1, respectively. The modeling studies were performed to illustrate the relationship between the ratio of the microwave output power to sample amount and effective moisture diffusivity. The relationship between drying constant and effective moisture diffusivity was also estimated.  相似文献   

5.
Measurements of drying rate of Pinus radiata at 55°C and 30% RH are presented. The data, which has been used to establish empirical models for P. radiata under dehumidifier drying conditions, was obtained in four drying runs in a drying tunnel, each yielding detailed drying curves for twelve sample sapwood boards of size 350 × 100 × 50 mm. Compression wood was found to have a significant effect on the drying rate curve, giving lower drying rates at 40-100% MC. This effect is interpreted through the use of a numerical multiple-mechanism two-zone model and quantified by using best-fit diffusion parameters from an isothermal diffusion model. A positive correlation was discovered between the moisture diffusion coefficient and initial moisture content, a strong indicator for the presence of compression wood. In the two-zone model, the compression wood effect was replicated by using a tenfold decrease in permeability to liquid flow. Attributes of compression wood that could cause reduced permeability include an increased proportion of latewood, narrower lumen, and a scarcity of bordered pits on the radial walls of longitudinal tracheids.  相似文献   

6.
A vacuum drying system was designed and fabricated and that system was used to dry green rough hardwood dimension. The red oak samples, 76.2 (long) × 7.62 (wide) × 2.54 (thick) cm, were dried from green moisture content (MC) to 7% MC in this system. They were dried at a pressure of 12 mm Hg and temperatures ranging from 30 to 50°C within 25 to 70 h. Drying quality tested included warp, internal checking, and surface checking. Moisture gradients along the length and thickness were measured. The standard prong test was used to assess the drying stresses. Vacuum drying was fast and the drying rate increased as the temperature increased. It was found that the general drying quality was good with no color change. Drying stresses including longitudinal and transverse stresses were small. There were no internal checks.  相似文献   

7.
A SINGLE-LAYER MODEL FOR FAR-INFRARED RADIATION DRYING OF ONION SLICES   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
J. Wang 《Drying Technology》2002,20(10):1941-1953
  相似文献   

8.
Constant and Intermittent Drying Characteristics of Olive Cake   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The drying kinetics of olive cake, the solid by-product of the olive oil extraction process, has been experimentally investigated in a small-scale tray dryer using both constant and intermittent (on/off) heating schemes. The parameters investigated include inlet air temperature and intermittency of heat input. The drying kinetics was interpreted through two mathematical models, the Page equation and the Lewis equation. The Page equation was most appropriate in describing the drying behavior of olive cake. A diffusion model was used to describe the moisture transfer and the effective diffusion coefficient at each temperature was determined. The dependence of the effective diffusion coefficient on drying temperature can be adequately explained based on an Arrhenius-type relation. The effective diffusion coefficient varied between 7.6 × 10-8 and 2.5 × 10-7 m2/min with an activation energy of 38.55 kJ/mol. Comparison of time evolution of material moisture content due to intermittent and constant drying is also made.  相似文献   

9.
In this study, the drying characteristics of seven vegetables (garlic, potato, bean. ginger, leek, onion, and carrot) and five fruits (avocado, banana, sultana, kiwi fruit and apple) were studied under idealised 'constant' controlled drying conditions using an automatic thermogravimetric analyser. Drying-rate curves were constructed and quantified in a systematic way using the least-squares method. This allowed the drying behaviour of each product to be expressed in terms of three variables; gradient of the “constant rate” stage, gradient of the falling rate stage and critical moisture content (CMC)

The drying curves of fruits and vegetables were found to vary greatly indicating the nature of foodstuffs to have a strong effect on the drying kinetics. The gradient of the constant rate period was not truly constant but had an average gradient of 3.1 × 10-4 per second with bean having the lowest gradient (1.9 × 10 -4/) and garlic having the highest gradient (5.3 × 10-4/s). This was expected as bean had the highest moisture content (93% wet basis) and was able to feed the surface with sufficient water to maintain a near constant rate of evaporation

The falling-rate period ranged from 10 × 10-4 per second with avocado and garlic having the lowest gradient while apple had the highest gradient of 30 × 10-4 per second. The CMC for most of the fruits and vegetables studied was about 1 kg/kg dry mass. This means that, at the CMC, the mass of water was the same as the mass of dry matter but with a spread in values from 0.7 for a fruit like banana to 1.8 for avocado.  相似文献   

10.
Kinetics and Mass Transfer during Atmospheric Freeze Drying of Red Pepper   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Drying is applied for moisture removal to allow safe and extended storage. Red pepper (Capsicum annum) samples were heat pump dried in fluidized bed at different air temperatures. A slightly modified solution of the diffusion equation was used to describe the kinetics and drying rates of red pepper. The model well described the low- and medium-temperature drying processes. The determined effective mass diffusivities varied from 0.7831 to 4.0201 × 10-9 m2/s and increased consistently with drying air temperature. The mass diffusivity was correlated to temperature by linear regression with coefficient of determination equal to 0.999 and negligible standard error.  相似文献   

11.
Drying curves were determined in a mechanically agitated fluidized bed dryer, at temperatures between 70°C and 160°C, air velocities between 1.1 m/s and 2.2 m/s and stirring rates between 30 rpm and 70 rpm for batch drying of 3 kg lots of carrot slices, measuring the moisture content and shrinking of the particles in time. This was complemented by a study of the rate and degree of swelling of dried carrot particles in water between 20 and 75°C. Drying kinetics were modeled by Fick's second law, for which an optimal agreement with the experimental data was obtained when the effective diffusivity (De) was determined by a correlation based on the air velocity (v), the air temperature (T) and the dimensional moisture content of the carrot particles (X/Xo). Loss of carotenes is minimized when dehydration is carried out at about 130°C with a drying time below 12 min.  相似文献   

12.
Osmotic drying was carried out, with cylindrical samples of apple cut to a diameter-to-length ratio of 1:1, in a well-agitated large tank containing the osmotic solution at the desired temperature. The solution-to-fruit volume ratio was kept greater than 30. A modified central composite rotatable design (CCRD) was used with five levels of sucrose concentrations (34-63°Brix) and five temperatures (34-66°C). Kinetic parameters weight reduction (WR), moisture loss (ML), solids gain (SG) were considered. A polynomial regression model was developed to relate moisture loss and solids gain to process variables. A conventional diffusion model involving a finite cylinder was also used for moisture loss and solids gain, and the associated diffusion coefficients were computed. The calculated moisture diffusivity ranged from 8.20 × 10-10 to 24.26 × 10-10 m2/s and the solute diffusivity ranged from 7.82 × 10-10 to 37.24 × 10-10 m2/s. Suitable ranges of main parameters were identified for OD kinetics further study.  相似文献   

13.
《Drying Technology》2007,25(10):1703-1712
The effect of microwave drying technique on moisture content, moisture ratio, drying rate, drying time, effective moisture diffusivity, and porosity of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) were investigated. By increasing the microwave output powers (180-900 W) and the sample amounts (25-100 g), the drying time decreased from 18 to 3.5 min and increased from 7.7 to 25 min, respectively. To determine the kinetic parameters, the drying data were fitted to various models based on the ratios of the differences between the initial and final moisture contents and equilibrium moisture content versus drying time. Among of the models proposed, Page's model gave a better fit for all drying conditions applied. The activation energy was calculated using an exponential expression based on Arrhenius equation. The relationship between the drying rate constant and effective moisture diffusivity was also estimated and gave a linear relationship.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of this study was to assess the actual performance of an instrumented industrial solar kiln for drying Australian hardwood timber (Eucalyptus pilularis) boards (270 × 43 mm). Ambient temperature and humidity, air temperature and humidity in the kiln, and wood moisture contents were recorded on site (Heron's Creek, NSW, Australia) using sensors and an electronic data acquisition and logging system. The average increases in air temperatures in the kiln compared with ambient conditions were 17.3°C (May-June), 13.8°C (July-August), 10°C (September-October), 8.2°C (November-March), and 7.5°C (March-May) for five runs monitored. Drying times were 2-4 months from initial moisture contents of 43 to 62% (dry-basis) to final moisture contents of 12 to 22%. Overall, the solar kiln has been shown to be an acceptable alternative to air-drying for pre-drying of Australian hardwood timber.  相似文献   

15.
Desirable flavor qualities of cocoa are dependent on how the cocoa beans are fermented, dried, and roasted. During fermentation and drying, polyphenols such as leucocyanidin and apecatechin are oxidized by polyphenols oxidase to form o-quinone, which later react nonenzymatically with a hydroquinone in a condensation reaction to form browning products and moisture. The objective of this article is to model the cocoa beans drying together with the browning reaction. A Luikov drying model for the moisture and a simple Fick's law diffusion model combined with first-order reactions for both the enzymatic oxidation and nonenzymatic condensation reactions were constructed. Both models were used to identify moisture diffusivity coefficient and total polyphenols diffusivity in cocoa beans from experimental drying and polyphenols degradation data and published kinetic data of the reactions. The theoretical drying model fitted the experimental cocoa bean drying curves with low mean square of residuals. The polyphenols diffusion and reaction model also fitted the experimental polyphenols degradation curves with minimum mean residual squares. The rate of polyphenols degradation in the cocoa beans increases at higher temperature and higher relative humidity. This is because the increasing reaction rate of polyphenols oxidation reaction as well as higher moisture diffusion at higher relative humidity and temperature. The effective moisture diffusivity in cocoa beans is estimated to be between 8.194 × 10-9 and 8.542 × 10-9 m2·s-1, which is of the same order of magnitude as published data. The effective total polyphenols diffusivity is estimated to be between 8.333 × 10-12 to 1.000 × 10-11 m2·s-1 with minimum mean residual squares. It is three orders of magnitude less than the estimated moisture diffusivity because of the larger polyphenols molecules. The estimated polyphenols diffusivity is very close to those published in the literature for sorption and ultrafiltration processes.  相似文献   

16.
Carrot slices of 3.5 mm thickness were dried in a laboratory microwave vacuum dryer at five different microwave power density levels of 2, 4.66, 7.33, 10, and 12.66 W/g and at three vacuum chamber pressure levels of 6.66, 19.98, and 33.3 kPa to 4-6% d.b. moisture content. Inside the dryer the sample holding plate was rotated with the speed of 4 rpm for uniform microwaves application. The drying rates were increased with the increase in microwave power density at all pressure levels and the Page model was found to be the most suitable model to predict the drying behavior of carrot slices at all process conditions. The Page model drying rate constant (k, min-1) showed high correlation with microwave power density at constant pressure by a power law equation and showed a logarithmic relationship with the microwave power density and pressure. Similar to the drying rate constant, the average moisture diffusivity at constant pressure was found to be function of microwave power density by power law equation as well as was also dependent on the power density and pressure by a logarithmic relationship.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of pulsed electric field (PEF) and subsequent centrifugal osmotic dehydration (OD) on the convective drying behavior of carrot is investigated. The PEF was carried out at an intensity of E = 0.60 kV/cm and a treatment duration of tPEF = 50 ms. The following centrifugal OD was performed in a sucrose solution of 65% (w/w) at 40°C for 0, 1, 2, or 4 h under 2400 × g. The drying was performed after the centrifugal OD for temperatures 40-60°C and at constant air rate (6 m3/h).

With the increase of OD duration the air drying time is reduced spectacularly. The dimensionless moisture ratio Xr = 0.1 is reached for PEF-untreated carrots after 370 min of air drying at 60°C in absence of centrifugal OD against 90 min of air drying after the 240 min of centrifugal OD. The PEF treatment reduces additionally the air drying time. The total time of dehydration operations can be shortened when OD time is optimized. For instance, the minimal time required to dehydrate untreated carrots until Xr = 0.1 is 260 min (120 min of OD at 40°C and 140 min of drying at 60°C). It is reduced to 230 min with PEF-treated carrots.

The moisture effective diffusivity Deff is calculated for the convective air drying based on Fick's law. The centrifugal OD pretreatment increases drastically the value of Deff. For instance, 4 h of centrifugal OD permitted increasing the value of Deff from 0.93 · 10-9 to 3.85 · 10-9 m2/s for untreated carrots and from 1.17 · 10-9 to 5.10 · 10-9 m2/s for PEF-treated carrots.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of changes in the bound water content in dietetic sucrose-free sponge cakes (DC) during storage was investigated. The effect of edible films of polymyxan, pectin, xanthan, and carboxymethylcellulose upon this kinetics was also investigated. The quantitative changes in both states of water (slightly bound water and strongly bound water) were registered by combined dynamic analysis (thermogravimetry analysis, TGA, and differential thermal analysis, DTA). The moisture changes in DC crumb were analyzed by drying out to constant mass. The rate constants were determined according the equation q = qoe-kt. The values of rate constants 'k', in day-1, concerning the different edible films were as follows: for crumb moisture is (8.00 ≤ k ≤ 12.47) × 10-3, for bound water is (3.07 ≤ kw ≤ 6.26) × 10-2, for slightly bound water is (4.22 ≤ k1 ≤ 8.49) × 10-2 and for strongly bound water is (2.02 ≤ k2 ≤ 5.62) × 10-2 as compared to 18.53 × 10-3, 7.16 × 10-2, 9.04 × 10-2, and 5.36 × 10-2 in the uncovered DC, respectively. The best water-retaining effect in respect to crumb moisture during storage was ascertained in the use of polymyxan and xanthan films. The lowest rate constant values for bound water and its two states were measured for DC covered with pectin. The relation between the kinetics of both bound water states during storage and ageing of the crumb of DC covered with different edible films and the crumb microstructure was represented. By means of scanning electron microscope was read the smallest change in crumb microstructure of pectin-covered DC on the sixth day of storage.  相似文献   

19.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND DRYING RATE OF ECHINACEA ROOT   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Echinacea angustifolia or the purple coneflower is an important medicinal plant that boosts the immune system. It is believed that the active ingredients are predominantly located in the root. Physical characteristics and drying rates of the root of E. angustifolia from a farm in Saskatchewan, Canada were studied. Root consisted of a main (central) root and secondary root branches. Cleaned roots exhibited wide variations in mass ranging from 15 to 95 g. The central root diameter varied from 9 to 20 mm with an average of 14 mm. The average initial moisture content of the fresh root was 57% (wb). The specific densities of the fresh and completely dried root were 1040 and 1370 kg/m3, respectively; and the corresponding bulk densities of loosely piled roots were 305 and 410 kg/m3. Roots were dried in a convection oven at temperatures of 23, 30, 40, 50, 60 and 70°C. Equations for estimating drying rates, drying constants, and equilibrium moisture content were developed. Increased drying temperatures reduced echinacosides but did not affect alkamides 1 and 2 which are known to be also responsible for medicinal value of E. Angustifolia.  相似文献   

20.
While Fickian diffusion models are commonly used in other applications, there are few reports of them being applied to the batch drying of a mineral concentrate. Diffusion coefficients estimated from small-scale oven-drying tests were used to predict the drying behavior of a concentrate sample 1 m × 1 m in area and 50 cm deep, with a heated bottom pad. These pilot-scale tests included both daily turning of the sample and turning every three days. The excellent quantitative agreement between the predicted and observed pilot-scale behavior gives a high level of confidence in the model predictions and suggests that a Fickian diffusion model is adequate to predict the behavior of mineral concentrates at the low moisture contents used here.  相似文献   

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