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Ice morphology: fundamentals and technological applications in foods.

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TLDR
In this article, the authors summarized the fundamentals of freezing, methods of observation and measurement of ice morphology, and the role of ice morphological properties in technological applications, including the use of ice nucleation agents, antifreeze proteins, ultrasound and high pressure.
Abstract
Freezing is the process of ice crystallization from supercooled water. Ice crystal morphology plays an important role in the textural and physical properties of frozen and frozen-thawed foods and in processes such as freeze drying, freeze concentration, and freeze texturization. Size and location of ice crystals are key in the quality of thawed tissue products. In ice cream, smaller ice crystals are preferred because large crystals results in an icy texture. In freeze drying, ice morphology influences the rate of sublimation and several morphological characteristics of the freeze-dried matrix as well as the biological activity of components (e.g., in pharmaceuticals). In freeze concentration, ice morphology influences the efficiency of separation of ice crystals from the concentrated solution. The cooling rate has been the most common variable controlling ice morphology in frozen and partly frozen systems. However, several new approaches show promise in controlling nucleation (consequently, ice morphology), among them are the use of ice nucleation agents, antifreeze proteins, ultrasound, and high pressure. This paper summarizes the fundamentals of freezing, methods of observation and measurement of ice morphology, and the role of ice morphology in technological applications.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Applications of ultrasound in analysis, processing and quality control of food: A review

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes the major applications of low and high power ultrasound in food science and technology, and their methods and applications including important research results including the basic principles and applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

The freezing step in lyophilization: physico-chemical fundamentals, freezing methods and consequences on process performance and quality attributes of biopharmaceuticals.

TL;DR: To get a more comprehensive understanding of the processes that occur during freezing, the physico-chemical fundamentals of freezing are first summarized and the available techniques that can be used to manipulate or directly control the freezing process in lyophilization are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water crystallization and its importance to freezing of foods: A review

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of different aspects of water crystallization including modelling approaches, process evaluation methods and the effect of novel freezing techniques is presented, including ultrasound assisted freezing, high pressure freezing, ice nucleating proteins, and supersession of nucleation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasound assisted nucleation of some liquid and solid model foods during freezing

TL;DR: In this paper, the use of ultrasound waves to induce dynamic nucleation in deionised water, sucrose solution, and agar gel samples was studied, and the mechanism of ultrasound assisted nucleation was discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Controlled ice nucleation in cryopreservation--a review.

TL;DR: Nucleation of ice is the most significant uncontrolled variable in conventional cryopreservation leading to sample to sample variation in cell recovery, viability and function and should be controlled to allow standardisation of cryop Reservation protocols for cells for biobanking, cell based assays or clinical application.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Freezing as a path to build complex composites.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated how the physics of ice formation can be used to develop sophisticated porous and layered-hybrid materials, including artificial bone, ceramic-metal composites, and porous scaffolds for osseous tissue regeneration with strengths up to four times higher than those of materials currently used for implantation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hot air and freeze-drying of high-value foods: a review.

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of both preservation processes, hot air and freeze-drying, was done taking into account several important characteristics such as shrinkage, glass transition temperature, process-quality interaction, drying kinetics, costs and new improvements.
Journal ArticleDOI

The uses of ultrasound in food technology

TL;DR: The same physical and mechanical effects which have been utilised in sonochemistry have been applied to food processing as discussed by the authors, i.e. strong shear forces, particle fragmentation, increased mass and heat transfer, nucleation of seedling, etc.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design of freeze-drying processes for pharmaceuticals: practical advice.

TL;DR: It is the thesis that design of an “optimized” freeze-drying process is not particularly difficult for most products, as long as some simple rules based on well-accepted scientific principles are followed.
Book

Physical chemistry of foods

TL;DR: In this paper, the SI rules for notation for SI units are discussed. But the SI Units System is not defined. And the SI Rule for Notation for SI Quantities is not discussed.
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