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Evaporation. Introduction to Food Engineering. Evaporation. Removal of water from diluted liquid foods to obtain concentrated products. Microbiological stability Reduce transportation costs, storage Evaporator Heat exchanger in large chamber Product under vacuum. Evaporator.
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Evaporation Introduction to Food Engineering
Evaporation • Removal of water from diluted liquid foods to obtain concentrated products. • Microbiological stability • Reduce transportation costs, storage • Evaporator • Heat exchanger in large chamber • Product under vacuum
Evaporator • Single-effect evaporator • Vapor discarded • Multiple-effect evaporator • Vapor reused as heating medium
Duhring’s Rule • Linear relationship between boiling-point temperature of solution and boiling point temperature of water at the same pressure.
Example • Determine initial and final boiling point of a liquid food. The pressure in evaporator is 20 kPa. The product is being concentrated from 5 % to 25 % solids concentration. • Boiling pt. of water from steam table at 20 kPa = 60 C (333 K)
From Duhring’s chart Initial 60 C Final 64 C 333 K 337 K
Types of Evaporator • 1. Batch-type pan evaporator
Heat transfer per unit volume is small • => long residence time, limit capacities
Types of Evaporator • 2. Natural circulation evaporators • 1 – 2 m vertical tubes inside steam chest
Types of Evaporator • 3. Rising-film evaporator • 10 – 15 m vertical tubes • Film of liquid move upward • Need 14 C difference between heating medium and product
Types of Evaporator • Falling-film evaporator • Thin liquid film move downward • Distribution of liquid in uniform film by spray nozzles • Handle more viscous liquids than rising-film • Less residence time
Types of Evaporator • 5. Rising/falling-film evaporator • 6. Forced-circulation evaporator • Use pump to maintain high circulation rates • 7. Agitated thin-film evaporator • Very viscous fluid foods • Feed is spread on heating surface by wiper blades
Mass Balance • Flow • Solids
Enthalpy Balance • kJ/kg feed steam vapor product condensate Hv (Ts), Hv (T1) , Hc (Ts) from steam table
Rate of heat transfer q = rate of heat transfer (W) U = overall heat transfer coefficient (W/m2K) A = area, m2
Rate of heat transfer • U decreases as product becomes concentrated. • increase resistance of heat transfer • Boiling point elevation • But constant U is used -> overdesign
Steam Economy • Ratio-rate of mass of water vapor produced per unit of steam consumed • Typically -> 1
Example • Apple juice is being concentrated. At steady state, feed = 0.67 kg/s. Concentration of the juice = 11 % total solids. The juice is concentrated to 75 % TS. Specific heats of diluted feed and concentrate are 3.9 and 2.3 kJ/kgC. The steam pressure is measured to be 304.42 kPa. Inlet feed temp is 43.3 C. The product inside the evaporator boils at 62.2 C. Assume U = 943 W/m2C, negligible boiling-point elevation. Calculate mass flow rate of concentrate product, steam requirements, steam economy and heat-transfer area.
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