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Introduction to Food Engineering
FOOD FREEZING Introduction to Food Engineering
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Food Freezing The reduction of product temperature to levels below 0 C
Significant reduction in growth rates of microorganisms Reduce rates of enzymatic and oxidation reactions Formation of ice crystals reduce Aw
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Food Freezing Some products require rapid freezing for small ice crystal, minimum damage to product structure Other products not influence by structural changes – no need for rapid freezing Some products cannot freeze rapidly
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Food Freezing Product quality = freezing time + storage condition
Fluctuations in storage temperature
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Freezing Systems Aim : remove sensible heat, latent heat of fusion
20 % of water remains in liquid state To reduce temp in short time Temp of medium much lower than final product temp Large convective heat-transfer coefficients
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1. Indirect contact systems
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Plate freezer Batch or continuous
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Air-blast freezer Product size/shape not accommodate plate freezing
Package film is the barrier Source of refrigeration = cold air Batch or continuous
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Freezers for liquid foods
Mostly before packaging Scraped-surface system 60-80 % latent heat removed Frozen slurry eg. ice cream Batch or continuous
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2. Direct contact systems
No barriers to heat transfer between refrigerant and product
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Air blast Low-temp air at high speeds Individual quick freezing (IQF)
High convective heat-transfer coefficient Small product shape Fluidized-bed IQF
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Immersion Nitrogen, CO2, freon
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Immersion Disadvantages Cost of refrigerant Difficult to recover
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Frozen-food properties
Water in food changes to solid. Density, thermal conductivity, heat content (enthalpy), apparent specific heat change.
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Density
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Thermal Conductivity
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Enthalpy
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Apparent Specific Heat
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Apparent Specific Heat
Below 20 C below initial freezing temp = value of unfrozen food
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Freezing Time Plank’s Equation
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tF = freezing time = density HL = latent heat of fusion a = size (thickness, diameter) hc, k Infinite plate P =1/2 , R = 1/8 Infinite cylinder P = 1/4 , R = 1/16 Sphere P = 1/2 , R = 1/24
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Example Spherical food product is being frozen in air-blast tunnel. Initial product temp = 10 C, cold air – 15 C. Product diameter 7 cm, density 1,000 kg/m3. Initial freezing temp – 1.25 C, latent heat of fusion 250 kJ/kg. K product = 1.2 W/m.K. Compute freezing time.
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P = 1/6 , R = 1/24 hc = 50 W/m2K tF = x 103 s = 2.04 hr.
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Limitations to Plank’s Equation
Density values for frozen foods are difficult to locate/measure Latent heats of fusion – for water & water content of product Initial & final product temp not accounted for Thermal conductivity, k, for frozen product not readily available
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Other Freezing-Time Prediction Methods
a) One-dimensional infinite slab Valid within following ranges 0.02<NBi< 11, 0.11< NSte<0.36, 0.03<NPk<0.61
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Cu, Cf = vol specific heat of unfrozen, frozen products
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L = latent heat
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b) Ellipsoid Shapes t ellipsoid = tslab/E For infinite slab E = 1
Infinite cylinder E = 2 Sphere E = 3
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= dimension factor of ellipsoid
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Example Lean beef 74.5 % moisture content
Length = 1 m, width = 0.6 m, thickness = 0.25 hc = 30 W/m2K, air temp = -30 C, Ti = 5 C, TF = C, density 1050 kg/m3 Etc.
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