首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
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   

2.
The aim of this work was to study the influence of pulsed electric field (PEF) on the drying kinetics of apple tissue. Therefore, mathematical models that are commonly used in the literature were applied to describe the process. PEF treatment of the samples was carried out at an intensity of E = 5–10 kV/cm and 10–50 pulse numbers. Subsequently, the apples were convectively dried at 70°C and air velocity of 2 m/s. Based on electrical conductivity measurement, the cell disintegration index Z p was computed. Midilli et al.'s(Drying Technology, Vol. 20, pp. 1503–1513, 2001) model was evaluated as the most adequate to describe the moisture transfer in PEF-treated and intact samples. PEF pretreatment induced a reduction in drying time of up to 12% when 10 kV/cm and 50 pulses were applied. For instance, after 60 min of drying, the dimensionless moisture ratio for PEF-treated (10 kV/cm, 50 pulses) samples was 0.18 compared to 0.26 for the untreated apples. The effective moisture diffusivity, calculated on the basis of the Fick's second law, was 1.04 × 10?9 m/s for intact samples and from 1.09 × 10?9 to 1.25 × 10?9 m2/s for PEF-treated samples at 10 pulses at 5 kV/cm and 50 pulses at 10 kV/cm, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
The aim of the study was to investigate the impact of pulsed electric field (PEF) treatment on the convective drying kinetics of a carrot and color and microstructure changes of the dried product. Samples were treated by PEF with the specific energy input equal to 5.63, 8 and 80 kJ · kg?1. After PEF treatment, thermal conductivity and electrical conductivity were measured. Drying time of the PEF-treated samples was reduced up to 8.2% (Ws = 8 kJ · kg?1, 5 kV · cm?1; 10 pulses) in comparison to intact tissue. Statistical analysis showed that Midilli et al.’s model was considered to describe the kinetics of the process the most precisely. Pulsed electric field treatment increased the effective water diffusion coefficient up to 16.7%. Moreover, PEF treatment and drying caused the alteration of the sample color. After drying, the lightness and chroma were higher or unchanged in comparison to the intact tissue. The dried PEF-treated samples exhibited significantly higher redness (higher value of a* parameter) in comparison to the untreated dried samples. Moreover, the visual inspection of scanning electron microscope images revealed that PEF pretreatment performed at high electric field intensity (5 kV · cm?1, regardless of pulse number) provoked the material to form greater cavities during drying in comparison to the untreated material.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of pretreatments such as citric acid and hot water blanching and air temperature on drying and rehydration characteristics of red kidney bean seeds were investigated. Drying experiments were carried out at four different drying air temperatures of 50°C, 60°C, 70°C, and 80°C. It was observed that drying and rehydration characteristics of bean seeds were greatly influenced by air temperatures and pretreatments. Four commonly used mathematical models were evaluated to predict the drying kinetics of bean seeds. The Weibull model described the drying behaviour of bean seeds at all temperatures better than the other models. The effective moisture diffusivities (Deff) of bean seeds were determined using Fick's law of diffusion. The values of Deff were between 1.25 × 10?9 and 3.58 × 10?9 m2/s. Activation energy was estimated by an Arrhenius-type equation and was determined as 24.62, 21.06, and 20.36 kJ/mol for citric acid, blanch, and control samples, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of osmotic dehydration (OD) with or without pulsed vacuum (PV) on hot-air drying kinetics and quality attributes of cherry tomatoes were investigated. Both OD and PVOD pre-treatments were performed for 3 h at 50°C in 50 and 70o Brix sucrose solutions with a solution-to-fruit mass ratio of 4:1, and PVOD was applied for 15 min before OD at atmospheric pressure. Samples were further dried at air temperature of 70°C. Effective moisture diffusivity (D eff) of osmotically dehydrated samples increased gradually while the Deff curve of fresh samples had a plateau stage during hot air drying. Lower glass transition temperature, Tg, values of osmotically dehydrated samples indicated that they needed a lower storage temperature. Both OD and PVOD pre-treatments had advantages in shortening drying cycles and improving quality of products. Compared with air drying, osmo-air drying decreased the total drying time, color change, and hardness of dried samples by 32.26%, 18.11%, and 88.21%, respectively, and increased volume ratio and vitamin C retention rate by 72.31% and 125.82%. As compared with OD, PVOD decreased color change and hardness by 28.48% and 45.17%, increased volume ratio and vitamin C retention rate by 27.41% and 17.77%, but there was no significant difference shown in drying time. Therefore, osmotic pre-treatment can shorten the total dehydration time, and improve the general quality of dried cherry tomatoes.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract

Air drying of camu-camu slices was performed in order to estimate the effect of air temperature on the kinetics of ascorbic acid thermal degradation. Moisture variation during the air drying process was monitored gravimetrically by weighing the trays at predetermined time intervals. The experimental points were adjusted by Fick's diffusion model and by the Page empirical model. The effective diffusion coefficient (Deff) ranged from 8.48 × 10?10 to 1.34 × 10?9 m2/s.The ascorbic acid content was evaluated in samples taken during the drying process using Iodine titration, and the results modeled by the Weibull equation. Concerning ascorbic acid retention the best drying condition required air at 50°C. The ascorbic acid retention was 78%, when the moisture content of the product reached 10% (wet basis).  相似文献   

7.
Suxuan Xu 《Drying Technology》2013,31(13):1422-1431
A continuous vacuum drying method was used to develop low-fat tortilla chips with good sensory properties. To better understand the process, drying models were developed to determine the effects of drying thickness and temperature on drying rate. Drying rates were determined at three conduction plate temperatures (80, 90, and 100°C) and three product thicknesses (0.8, 1.5, and 2.3 mm). An effective diffusion model and semi-empirical models were used to fit the data. In addition, a model was developed from the drying rate curves that incorporated a drying coefficient [k(t)] that varied with time and could be described by a two-term Lorentzian model. All models had good agreement between experimental data and predicted data, with R 2 > 0.98. With consideration of other goodness-of-fit indicators (sum of squared errors [SSE] and χ2), the Page and variable coefficient models provided the best fit. The average effective moisture diffusivity was calculated using nonlinear regression and ranged from D eff = 1.19 to 1.54 × 10?9 m2/s. D eff increased with temperature and was described by an Arrhenius equation with E a  = 14.1 kJ/mol.

Continuous vacuum drying of a presteamed corn dough can be used to produce low-fat tortilla chips with high crispness and acceptable sensory properties. The drying rate models presented in this study will help predict appropriate drying times, optimize process conditions, and better understand the mechanisms of drying.  相似文献   

8.
Scientific literature of agromaterial drying present contradictory conclusions in terms of the kinetic effect of airflow velocity. Some authors confirmed that it does not trigger any modification of drying, while some articles tried to establish empirical models of the effective diffusivity Deff versus the airflow velocity, what is fundamentally erroneous. By analyzing internal and external transfer phenomena, this research aimed at recognizing that once air velocity is higher than a critical airflow velocity (CAV), the internal transfers become the limiting phenomenon. CAV depends on the effective diffusivity and the product size. It was calculated in the cases of two studied raw materials (apple and carrot), differently textured by instant controlled pressure drop (DIC). Values of CAV greatly depend on diffusivity of water within the matrix. At temperature T?=?40°C, they were 1?m/s for untreated carrot and 2.1?m/s for DIC-textured carrot, whose Deff values were 1.31 and about 3?×?10?10?m2/s, respectively. Also, at temperature T?=?40°C, they were 2.1?m/s for untreated apple and 3?m/s for DIC-textured apple, whose Deff were 1.4 and about 10.4?×?10?10?m2/s, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
A drying technique using a combination of a contact ultrasound apparatus and a hot air dryer is developed to investigate the strengthening effect of contact ultrasound on hot air drying. The effects of drying parameters such as ultrasound power and drying temperature on drying characteristics, effective moisture diffusivity (Deff), microstructure, glass transition temperature (Tg), rehydration ratio, and color difference are discussed. The results show that the application of contact ultrasound causes a significant acceleration of internal mass transfer, and higher ultrasound power applied leads to faster drying rate. The effect of ultrasound power on drying rate decreases along with the reduction of moisture content during drying process. The increase in drying temperature significantly reduces drying time but has a little negative influence on the strengthening effect of ultrasound. Deff values range from 1.0578?×?10?10 to 5.4713?×?10?10?m2/s in contact ultrasound-assisted hot air drying of purple-fleshed sweet potato and increase significantly with an increase in drying temperature as well as ultrasound power. The microstructure of purple-fleshed sweet potato is greatly different at different ultrasound powers during contact ultrasound-assisted hot air drying and shows more microchannels and dilated intercellular spaces in the cross-section of purple-fleshed sweet potato micrographs at higher ultrasound power. Contact ultrasound application during hot air drying could improve the mobility of water and consequently reduce glass transition temperature. Lower color difference and higher rehydration ratio could be achieved as drying temperature decreases and ultrasound power increases. The increase in contact ultrasound power could reduce energy consumption of drying process up to 34.60%. Therefore, contact ultrasound assistance is a promising method to enhance hot air drying process.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

A conveyor-belt dryer for picrite has been modeled mathematically in this work. The necessary parameters for the system of equations were obtained from regression analysis of thin-layer drying data. The convective drying experiments were carried out at temperatures of 40, 60, 80, and 100°C and air velocities of 0.5 and 1.5 m/sec. To analyze the drying behavior, the drying curves were fitted to different semi-theoretical drying kinetics models such as those of Lewis, Page, Henderson and Pabis, Wang and Singh, and the decay models. The decay function (for second order reactions) gives better results and describes the thin layer drying curves quite well. The effective diffusivity was also determined from the integrated Fick's second law equation and correlated with temperature using an Arrhenius-type model. External heat and mass transfer coefficients were refitted to the empirical correlation using dimensionless numbers (J h , J D  = m · Re n ) and their new coefficients were optimized as a function of temperature. The internal mass transfer coefficient was also correlated as a function of moisture content, air temperature, and velocity.  相似文献   

11.
M. Zielinska 《Drying Technology》2016,34(10):1147-1161
The objective of this study was to dry–wet distillers grains and centrifuged solubles and to examine the effect of two different drying media, superheated steam and hot air, at different drying temperatures (110, 130, and 160°C), moisture contents (5–30% wb), and percentages of solubles’ presence (0 or 100%) on some thermophysical properties of laboratory-prepared corn/wheat dried distillers co-products, including geometric mean diameter (dg), particle density (ρp), bulk density (ρb), bulk porosity (?b), specific heat (C), effective thermal diffusivity (αeff), and bulk thermal conductivity (λb). The values of dg of corn/wheat dried distillers co-products ranged from 0.358 ± 0.001 to 0.449 ± 0.001 mm. Experimental values of ρp, ρb, and ?b varied from 1171 ± 6 to 1269 ± 3 kg m?3, from 359 ± 7 to 605 ± 5 kg m?3, and from 0.54 ± 0.01 to 0.71 ± 0.01 kg m?3, respectively. The values of αeff were between 0.58 × 10?7 and 0.93 × 10?7 m2 s?1. The calculated values of C ranged from 1887 ± 11 to 2599 ± 19 J kg?1 K?1, and the values of λb of corn/wheat dried distillers co-products ranged from 0.06 ± 0.01 to 0.09 ± 0.01 W m?1 K?1. Multiple linear regression prediction models were developed to predict the changes in dg, ρp, ρb, ?b, C, αeff, and λb of laboratory-prepared corn/wheat dried distillers co-products with different operational factors.  相似文献   

12.
This study aimed to develop a suitable drying model for microwave vibro-fluidized bed drying in a single-mode applicator (MVFB-SMA drying) of cooked rice with and without prefreezing treatment and to investigate the effects of prefreezing treatment and drying temperature (110–185°C) on quality of dried cooked rice. During the process of drying cooked rice from 60 to 10% (wet basis), results indicated that drying rate increased, whereas drying time decreased with prefreezing treatment and increased drying temperature. The drying rate and drying time of unfrozen and frozen cooked rice ranged from 0.196 to 0.497 g water/g dry matter/min and 0.228 to 0.554 g water/g dry matter/min; and from 7 to 2.5 min and 5.5 to 2 min, respectively. A new model was proposed in this study (MR = exp(?k t n ) + bt + c) to compare with 11 commonly used drying models. The new model describes the MVFB-SMA drying data most satisfactorily. The values of effective diffusivity were between 1.70 × 10?7 and 5.72 × 10?7 m2/s for the unfrozen sample and between 1.99 × 10?7 and 5.86 × 10?7 m2/s for the frozen sample. Their activation energy values were 23.66 and 21.19 kJ/mol, respectively. Prefreezing treatment provided a whiter product with a less uniform porous structure and higher bulk density. Slower ability to rehydrate was also observed for the frozen cooked rice dried at 160 and 185°C. An increase in drying temperature resulted in changes in whiteness, microstructure, bulk density, and rehydration capability. No prefreezing treatment and drying at 160°C seemed to be the optimal process condition for cooked rice, ensuring whiteness, a porous structure, low bulk density, and high rehydration capability.  相似文献   

13.
Industrial production of lactose hydrolyzed milk powder (LHMP) remains challenging. Due to the presence of the monosaccharides glucose and galactose, lactose-free powders tend to suffer stickiness, caking, and browning during drying and storage. We sought to find ideal conditions spray dryer inlet air temperature (θair,in) and concentrated milk flow rate (mCM) for LHMP production. We tested θair,in settings of 115–160°C and mCM of 0.3–1.5?kg?·?h?1, and also applied mass and energetic balances. LHMP generally exhibited higher mass and energetic losses than the control (milk powder containing lactose), as a consequence of the relatively low dryability of LHMP. For a lab scale spray dryer, the ideal conditions settings for LHMP production were θair,in?=?145?±?2°C and mCM?=?1.0?kg?·?h?1, taking into account the mass yield and energetic cost (kJ?·?kg?1 of powder) of the process. These ideal conditions are a potential tool for the industrial development of lactose-free dairy powders.  相似文献   

14.
Single-layer solar drying experiments were conducted for Mexican tea leaves (Chenopodium ambrosioides) grown in Marrakech. An indirect forced convection solar dryer was used in drying the Mexican tea leaves at different conditions such as ambient air temperature (21° to 35°C), drying air temperature (45° to 60°C) with relative humidity (29 to 53%), airflow rate (0.0277 to 0.0556 m 3/s), and solar radiation (150–920 W/m2). The experimental drying curves showed only a falling rate period. In order to select the suitable form of drying curves, 14 mathematical models were applied to the experimental data and compared according to their statistical parameters. The main factor in controlling the drying rate was found to be the temperature. The drying rate equation was determined empirically from the characteristic drying curve. The diffusion coefficient of the Chenopodium ambrosioides leaves was estimated and varied between 1.0209 × 10?9 and 1.0440 × 10?8 m 2·s?1.The activation energy was found to be 89.1486 kJ·mol?1.  相似文献   

15.
The most appropriate maturity stage of Moringa oleifera leaves was selected for drying based on phytochemical content, including quercetin and kaempferol. Desorption isotherms were developed and were best fit by the modified Henderson model. Prior to drying, samples were left untreated, blanched in boiling water, and blanched in NaHCO3/MgO. The leaves were dried by hot air tray drying (TD) and heat pump–dehumidified drying air (HPD) at air temperatures of 40, 50, and 60°C. Alternatively, leaves were subject to microwave drying (MWD) at 150, 450, and 900 W and to freeze drying (FD). The moisture versus time data were fitted to five drying models. In general, a three-parameter model gave the best fit. The drying constant was related to the drying temperature or microwave power using an Arrhenius model. Effective moisture diffusivity (D eff) increased with higher drying temperature, higher microwave power, or blanching treatments. Structural changes in the leaves after drying and upon rehydration were observed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Leaves blanched and dried using HPD at 50°C and fresh and dried using FD showed a partial breakdown of the tissue structure upon rehydration. HPD and blanching reduced the drying time by 8.3% and increased quercetin and kaempferol levels by 42.1 and 51.4%, respectively, compared to TD at 50°C. MWD provided the quickest drying followed by HPD and TD, respectively. HPD drying of M. oleifera after blanching resulted in relatively greater quality compared to TD and MWD.  相似文献   

16.
The drying mechanism of fermented sausages (sucuks) that were cylindrical rod shaped, 40 cm long and 4 cm diameter, during ripening under natural convection conditions at different temperatures (15 to 30°C) was examined. To simulate the experimental drying curves, three empirical models and a diffusional model assuming negligible external mass transfer resistance were evaluated. The drying rate curves of sucuk samples were also simulated taking into account the influence of the external mass transfer resistance. The equation was solved using the trial-and-error solution algorithm developed in this study and the mass transfer coefficient, k c , and effective moisture diffusivity, D eff , were simultaneously determined (1.44 × 10?8 to 1.93 × 10?8 m/s and 4.30 × 10?10 to 6.85 × 10?10 m2/s, respectively). The proposed model considering the effect of external resistance allowed the accurate simulation of the experimental drying data of sucuks at different temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
Drying of two kinds of wastewater sludge was studied. The first part was an experimental work done in a discontinuous cross-flow convective dryer using 1 kg of wet material extruded in 12-mm-diameter cylinders. The results show the influence of drying air temperature for both sludges. The second part consisted of developing a drying model in order to identify the internal diffusion coefficient and the convective mass transfer coefficient from the experimental data. A comparison between fitted drying curves, well represented by Newton's model, and the analytical solutions of the equation of diffusion, applied to a finite cylinder, was made. Variations in the physical parameters, such as the mass, density, and volume of the dried product, were calculated. This allowed us to confirm that shrinkage, which is an important parameter during wastewater sludge drying, must be taken into account. The results showed that both the internal diffusion coefficient and convective mass transfer coefficient were affected by the air temperature and the origin of the sludge. The values of the diffusion coefficient changed from 42.35 × 10?9 m2 · s?1 at 160°C to 32.49 × 10?9 m2 · s?1 at 122°C for sludge A and from 33.40 × 10?9 m2 · s?1 at 140°C to 28.45 × 10?9 m2 · s?1 at 120°C for sludge B. The convective mass transfer coefficient changed from 4.52 × 10?7 m · s?1 at 158°C to 3.33 × 10?7 m · s?1 at 122°C for sludge A and from 3.44 × 10?7 m · s?1 at 140°C to 2.84 × 10?7 m2 · s?1 at 120°C for sludge B. The temperature dependency of the two coefficients was expressed using an Arrhenius-type equation and related parameters were deduced. Finally, the study showed that neglecting shrinkage phenomena resulted in an overestimation that can attain and exceed 30% for the two coefficients.  相似文献   

18.
In order to protect a hydrophilic drug and to prolong its further delivery, the formulation of multiple emulsions could be worthy. However, the double emulsions are not stable, their structure can change, leading to the formation of a single emulsion as the destruction of the system, and the drug can release easily from the globules in liquid state. The freeze-drying technology could be used to produce dry emulsion, the powder form being much more stable. The aim of this work was to study the influence of a cryoprotectant and a freeze-drying process on the stability of W/O/W emulsions. Samples were frozen at two different freezing rate (ν f  = 0.55°C/min and 1.25°C/min) and successively dried at two different sublimation temperature (T s  = ? 10°C and ? 20°C). The particle size distributions were measured by granulometer and UV spectrophotometer was performed to investigate the leakage of internal constituent. The glass transition temperature (T g ) of the double emulsions was analyzed by DSC. The particle sizes became even smaller after freeze drying, except when κ-carrageenan is used as a cryoprotectant. In that case, the particles became aggregated after freeze drying, whatever the process conditions. The mean size is considerably reduced when the globules are diluted at low concentration in glucose and trehalose solution. When the concentration is increased, the size distribution is not significantly affected. The leakage of the internal aqueous phase to the external one during freeze drying was measured as an indicator of the structure stability. It is affected by the nature of the cryoprotectant and the conditions of the freeze-drying process. The leakage of the internal phase was smaller when cycle III (ν f  = 1.25°C/min, T s  = ? 10°C) was processed. From our experiments, we suppose that the water transfer from the inner phase to the outer aqueous phase results in the diminution of the globules size in double emulsion. The T g of the double emulsions diluted with trehalose and glucose were determined at ? 33.8°C and ? 47.1°C. In contrast, the T g of double emulsion with κ-carrageenan and HES did not appear.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of drying temperature (50, 53, 56, 59, 62, and 65°C) and pulsed vacuum ratio defined as the vacuum pressure duration versus atmosphere pressure duration (3:3, 6:6, 9:2, 12:5, 15:1, 18:4?min/min) on pulsed vacuum drying (PVD) characteristics and quality attributes of wolfberry in terms of polysaccharide content, color parameters (L*, a*, b*, ΔE, and C), rehydration ratio and microstructure were investigated. Results revealed that appropriate PVD can reduce drying time by 73.2% compared to hot air drying at the same drying temperature. The moisture effective diffusivity (Deff) ranged from 5.23?×?10?10 to 9.73?×?10?10?m2/s, calculated using the Weibull distribution model. The polysaccharide content, L* (lightness), a* (redness/greenness) of the PVD products were higher than those of the hot air-dried samples at the same drying temperature. The total color difference (ΔE) and color intensity (C) of PVD samples were close to those of the fresh ones. The retention rate of total polysaccharide content of PVD samples was about 49–77%, which was significantly higher than 30% of the hot air-dried samples. The surface of PVD wolfberry was highly porous, which may enhance moisture transfer during drying as well as rehydration processes. The results of current work indicate that PVD is a promising technology for wolfberry process, for the reason that PVD can reduce drying time significantly as well as enhance the quality attributes in terms of the total polysaccharide content, color parameters and rehydration ratio.  相似文献   

20.
Pulsed electric field (PEF) pretreatment can increase the drying rate of produce, but preserving product quality while minimizing energy consumption and maintaining food quality is a significant challenge. The goal of this study was to determine optimal PEF parameters for pretreatment of Raphanus sativus (radish) prior to the drying process. The effects of pulse intensity, treatment time, and pulse number on the drying rate, vitamin C (Vc) content, and ascorbic acid oxidase activity of R. sativus were characterized. Optimal PEF pulse parameter values were determined through quadratic orthogonal regression tests followed by multi-objective nonlinear optimization. The optimal PEF pulse parameters for pretreatment of R. sativus were: pulse intensity, 1446 V · cm?1; reaction time, 28 μs; and pulse number, 87. This study provides reference values to guide application of PEF pretreatment in R. sativus processing.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号