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Journal ArticleDOI

Total porosity and open-pore porosity in the drying of fruits

TLDR
In this paper, a simple procedure has been implemented to measure porosity of apples as a function of moisture contents, and it is shown that the pores which for biological reasons are open, i.e. connected to the outside, remain so until X = 1.5 g/g.
Abstract
A simple procedure has been implemented to measure porosity of apples as a function of moisture contents. The method has been applied to apples with change in moisture contents by conventional air drying. It is shown that the pores, which for biological reasons are open, i.e. connected to the outside, at the onset of dehydration, remain so until X = 1.5 g/g. As dehydration proceeds the pores are split into two families of pores: externally connected pores and locked-in bores. Both total and open pore porosity can be predicted from experimental correlations. Alternatively, the total porosity can be estimated from data on bulk volume shrinkage and the average composition of the tissue by means of equations presented. The interpretation of experimental data using this approach confirms that there is a significant change in the three-dimensional arrangement of the cellular tissue below X = 1.5 g/g. The two approaches lead to the conclusion that, probably due to cellular collapse, the open structure that characterizes the fresh foodstuff changes into a structure with locked-in pores. This fact may help to explain the slow and difficult re-hydration which characterizes air-dried foodstuffs. This hypothesis will be followed up in future work. The information developed should be of help in qualitative and quantitative modeling of processes involving moisture changes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling shrinkage during convective drying of food materials: a review

TL;DR: In this paper, a physical description of the shrinkage mechanism and a classification of the different models proposed to describe this behaviour in food materials undergoing dehydration is presented. But, the authors do not consider the effect of porosity change on the quality of the dehydrated product and should be taken into consideration when predicting moisture and temperature profiles in the dried material.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shrinkage, Porosity and Bulk Density of Foodstuffs at Changing Moisture Contents

TL;DR: In this article, a generalized correlation is obtained which predicts bulk shrinkage coefficient knowing only the initial moisture content of the food, but there is no generalized equation spanning all foods, and the foodstuffs considered can be predicted through suitable correlations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shrinkage during drying of foodstuffs

TL;DR: Experimental shrinkage data as a function of water content for particles of potatoes, apples and carrots of different geometry and under various drying conditions are presented in this paper, where a simple model in which volumetric ratio is represented by one or two line segments is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quality and structural changes in starchy foods during microwave and convective drying

TL;DR: In this paper, a modified microwave oven, operated in either the microwave or convective drying mode, was used to dry the potato samples and the quality attributes of the dehydrated potato samples were investigated on the basis of the ascorbic acid retention (vitamin C) and rehydratibility, and the structure in terms of shrinkage behaviour.
Journal ArticleDOI

Densities, shrinkage and porosity of some vegetables during air drying

TL;DR: Bulk density, particle density, shrinkage and porosity were experimentally determined at various moisture content during air drying for apple, carrot and potato cubes as discussed by the authors, and a simple mathematica...
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transport properties of gases in porous media at reduced pressures with reference to freeze‐drying

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of pressure on permeabilities and thermal conductivities of gases in porous solids in the slip flow and free-molecule flow regions was discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics of water vapor desorption from apples

TL;DR: Water is desorbed from apples in two stages: the initial stage is characterized by a very fast release of water and the second stage corresponds to low moisture contents and a low rate of desorption as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermal conductivity of apples as a function of moisture content

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the thermal conductivity of apples over the entire range of moisture contents, from bone-dry to full turgor, by means of a probe.
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