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Samenvatting

Summary Food Engineering (grade: 8.5)

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Complete summary of the course Food Engineering (FPE20306), including theory discussed in practicals. Complete samenvatting van het vak Food Engineering (FPE20306), inclusief de theorie van de practica.











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Documentinformatie

Geüpload op
4 november 2019
Aantal pagina's
22
Geschreven in
2018/2019
Type
Samenvatting

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Summary Food Process
Engineering
1. Food material properties
Food: heterogenous system

- Homogenous parts: phases (separated by clear boundaries)
o Properties are considered uniform

State of phase: dependent on

- Pressure
- Temperature
- Composition

After critical point: No distinguishment between gas and liquid

Gases
Mixture of gases  Gases have partial pressures

- Sum of all pressures is overall pressure

Vapours = Gases which tend to condense under conditions close to room temperature and pressure

- Saturated water vapour pressure is dependent on the temperature
o Air that is at equilibrium with water (saturated air)

Boiling point elevation: Product becomes more concentrated because of evaporation, results in a
higher boiling point

Liquids
Liquids have a viscosity

- Newtonian = Viscosity is constant
- At a certain concentration, dissolved components start to interact with each other
o Yield stress will form, liquid seems a solid (but can be poured)
- No long-range ordering of molecules: amorphous

Gels and rubbers: Much stronger solid behaviour, dominate above liquid properties

- Cannot be deformed without limit like liquids (breakage)

Glasses: viscosity is so high that for all practical purposes the material becomes solid

- Flows immeasurably slowly
- All fluids and solutions can become glassy if cooled down quick enough

Solids
Crystalline state

- Very ordered



1

,Freezing point depression: More concentrated solution  Lower freezing point

State diagram = Modified phase diagram that also shows kinetic
limitations (glass transition)

Phase diagram >

< State diagram



Lever rule




Chemical potential μ [J/mol]J/mol]]

- Depends on pressure, volume, temperature and composition
o Standard chemical potential is reference state
- Equilibrium, when chemical potentials are equal
- Mixture of gases: xi is partial pressure divided by total pressure p

RH = pw / pw.sat

- Aw is eual to RH of vapour that is at equilibrium with the solution

Ideal solutions = Activity is equal to the molar fraction

- γ activity coefficient is 1 for ideal solutions
o γ < 1: strong interaction, good solubility γ > 1: poor interaction
- Low concentration of component  γ is constant  Henry’s law applies
o Kh is Henry’s coefficient

Volume fraction of water φw

Parameter that expresses the interaction between water and dissolved components χ

- χ = 0, Interaction between matrix and water is the same

2

, - χ<0 Solutes have great affinity for water χ>0 Solutes do not like moisture

Sorption isotherm = Relation between RH and amount of moisture in solid

- Moisture content is not the same as the affinity

Affinity: activity, depends on:

- Temperature
- Composition

Glasses -> Not in equilibrium with its surroundings

Water vapour sorption isotherm = Relation between the amount of moisture in the product and its
water activity (S-shaped relation)

Δhem should be in J/mol, when put in equations

2. Mass transfer
Glassy state: crispy behaviour

Hysteresis = Difference in adsorption and desorption

- Caused by the different layers in a food product (in mesostructure)

Requirements mass transfer

- Driving force
o Difference in concentration, T, p
- Molecules should be mobile: Brownian motion

Diffusion = Motion of individual molecules through a stagnant layer of other molecules

- Because of gradient in concentration
- Motion is caused by thermal motion of every molecule
o The higher the temperature, the larger the motion
o Result of random motion of the diffusing component
- Rate of diffusion in gas is 3 orders of magnitude smaller than in liquid (less collisions)
o In solid: only little vibration
- Steady state: Driving force of diffusion is equal to friction

Friction

- Dependent on difference in velocity between diffusing molecule u1 and surroundings u2
o u2 is often 0 , because in most systems the environment does not move
- x2 is mole fraction of the surroundings
- ζ12 friction coefficient
o The larger the coefficient, the larger the friction, the more difficult to move through
the matrix

D12 = RT / ζ12 = Maxwell-Stefan diffusion coefficient [m2/s]

Ṅ1 Molar flux [mol/m2s]

V̇1 Volume flux [m3/m2s] = Same equation as molar flux but without C1


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