1 / 15

Thermal Properties, Moisture Diffusivity Chpt 8

Thermal Properties, Moisture Diffusivity Chpt 8. Processing and Storage of Ag Products Heating Cooling Combination of heating and cooling Grain dried for storage Noodles dried Fruits/Vegetables rapidly cooled Vegetables are blanched, maybe cooked and canned

Télécharger la présentation

Thermal Properties, Moisture Diffusivity Chpt 8

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Processing and Storage of Ag Products Heating Cooling Combination of heating and cooling Grain dried for storage Noodles dried Fruits/Vegetables rapidly cooled Vegetables are blanched, maybe cooked and canned Powders such as spices and milk: dehydrated All include heat transfer and are dictated by thermal properties of material Generally diffusion of water in or out is involved

  2. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Heat is transferred by Conduction: temperature gradient exists within a body…heat transfer within the body Convection: Heat transfer from one body to another by virtue that one body is moving relative to the other Radiation: transfer of heat from one body to another that are separated in space in a vacuum. (blackbody heat transfer) We’ll consider Conduction w/in the product Convection: transfer by forced convection from product to moving fluid Moisture moves similar to heat by conduction Moisture diffusivity Volume change due to moisture content change

  3. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Terms: Specific heat Thermal conductivity Thermal diffusivity Thermal expansion coefficient Surface heat transfer coefficient Sensible and Latent heat Enthalpy

  4. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Specific heat: Amount of heat required to raise the temp. of one unit of mass one degree. Cp = specific heat at constant pressure Cp =4.18 kJ/kg-K = 1.00 BTU/lb-R=1.00 cal/g-K for water (unfrozen) oils and fats: ½ H2O See Table 8.1 pg. 219 grains, powders: ¼ - 1/3 H2O ice: ½ H2O Good list: http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/specific-heat-capacity-food-d_295.html Q = quantity of heat required to change temperature of a mass Q = Mcp(T2-T1) M = mass or weight

  5. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 For liquid H2O Cp = 0.837 + 3.348 M above freezing For solid H2O Cp = 0.837 + 1.256 M below freezing

  6. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Thermal Conductivity: measure of ability to transmit heat dQ/dt = -kA (dT/dx) K = coefficient of thermal conductivity W/m°K, Btu/h ft°F, 1 Btu/h ft °F = 1.731 W/m °K Greater the water content, the greater the thermal conductivity Tables 8.2 and 8.3

  7. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 If we don’t know t-conductivity, approximate using... K = VwKw + VsKs K = KwXw + Ks(1-Xw) where X = decimal fraction so K = f(all the constituent volumes) Example 8.1 pg 224

  8. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Thermal Diffusivity, α, (m2/sec or ft2/sec) Material’s ability to conduct heat relative to its ability to store heat α = k/(ρcp) Estimate the thermal diffusivity of a peach at 22 C.

  9. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Surface Heat Transfer Coefficient, h: Placed in a flowing stream of liquid or gas, the solid’s T will change until it eventually reaches equilibrium with the fluid Q/T = hA(T2 – T1) “h” is determined experimentally Look for research that matches your needs. (bottom of pg 227)

  10. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Sensible heat: Temperature that can be sensed by touch or measured with a thermometer. Temperature change due to heat transfer into or out of product Latent heat: transfer of heat energy with no accompanying change in temperature. Happens during a phase change...solid to liquid...liquid to gas...solid to gas

  11. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Latent Heat, L, (kJ/kg or BTU/lb) Heat that is exchanged during a change in phase Dominated by the moisture content of foods Requires more energy to freeze foods than to cool foods (90kJ removed to lower 1 kg of water from room T to 0C and 4x that amount to freeze food) 420 kJ to raise T of water from 0C to 100C, 5x that to evaporate 1 kg of water. Heat of vaporization is about 7x greater than heat of fusion (freezing) Therefore, evaporation of water is energy intensive (concentrating juices, dehydrating foods…)

  12. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Latent Heat, L, (kJ/kg or BTU/lb) Determine L experimentally when possible. When data is not available (no tables, etc) use…. L = 335 Xw where Xw is weight fraction of water Many fruits, vegetables, dairy products, meats and nuts are given in ASHRAE Handbook of Fundamentals

  13. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Enthalpy, h, (kJ/kg or BTU/lb) Heat content of a material. Combines latent heat and sensible heat changes ΔQ = M(h2-h1)…amount of heat to raise a product from T1 to T2 ASHRAE Handbook of Fundamentals When data is not available use eqtn. 8.15 pg 230. Δh = M cp(T2 – T1) + MXw L

  14. Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Example 8.3: Calculate the amount of heat which must be removed from 1 kg of raspberries when their temperature is reduced from 25C to -5C. Assume that the specific heat of raspberries above freezing is 3.7 kJ/kgC and their specific heat below freezing is 1.86 kJ/kgC. The moisture content of the raspberries is 81% and the ASHRAE tables for freezing of fruits and vegs. Indicate that at -5C, 27% will not yet be frozen.

  15. Lecture 12: Thermal Properties, Moisture DiffusivityChpt 8 Due March 5th Problem 1: Determine the amount of heat removed from 3 kg of bologna (sausage) when cooled from 23C to -7C. Assume MC of 59% and at -7C, 22% won’t be frozen. Problem 2: Estimate the thermal diffusivity of butter at 20°C.

More Related