Publication | Closed Access
TEMPERATURE AND MOISTURE CHANGES DURING MICROWAVE DRYING OF SLICED FOOD
72
Citations
9
References
1999
Year
Food ChemistryAgricultural EconomicsSliced FoodsSliced PotatoesFood PreservationAbstract MicrowaveFood EngineeringFood ProcessingThermal ProcessingOhmic HeatingFood QualityFood SafetyHealth Sciences
ABSTRACT Microwave drying characteristics of sliced foods were investigated using potatoes (Solarium tuberosum) as a test model. Sliced samples were dried to 7-10% moisture content at microwave power levels between 2.2 W/g and 3.6 W/g (raw material). Moisture and temperature changes during drying were monitored. Semi-empirical models were developed that followed temperature and moisture changes during microwave drying. Sliced potatoes experienced three distinct periods: a warming-up period with little removal of moisture; a constant temperature period in which most of the drying took place; and a heating up period in which the drying rate decreased and sample temperature increased rapidly, often causing partial charring. Product temperature during the second period of microwave drying increased with sample thickness and microwave power. Drying rates were not affected by slice thickness, but increased with the microwave power/mass ratio. Product charring towards the end of drying may be avoided by reducing microwave power and increasing ambient air velocity.
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