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Summary to Date

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Summary to Date Solutions are thermodynamically stable within a range of temperatures and compositions. Solutions more concentrated than their limit will tend to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Summary to Date


1
Summary to Date
  • Solutions are thermodynamically stable within a
    range of temperatures and compositions.
    Solutions more concentrated than their limit will
    tend to crystallize until the residual solution
    is back at the saturation limit.
  • Crystal formation requires the formation of a
    nucleus which can be a slow process due to the
    trade off between surface energy costs (DGgt0) and
    volume energy gains giving a free energy barrier
    for the formation of small crystals.

2
  • Almost always heterogeneous nucleation is faster
    than homogeneous nucleation.
  • More solid will then deposit on the nuclei
    (crystal growth) until the supersaturation is
    relieved.

3
  • Inventors Alan J. Forage William J. Byrne
  • Assignee Arthur Guinness Son Co., Ltd.
  • The gas pod in the can is blow molded with
    nitrogen (N).
  • A laser zaps a hole in the pod. (they
    experimented with holes between 0.2mm and 2.5mm
    finding that 0.61 mm as ideal)
  • Pod is inserted in the bottom of can.
  • Can is filled with CO2/N supersaturated stout. N
    is present at 1.5 v/v min up to 3.5 v/v. (FYI,
    vol/vol is the number of volumes of gas which are
    dissolved in a unit volume of beverage at 760mm
    of Hg 15.6 oC) CO2 is present at between 0.8
    and 1.5 v/v.
  • During filling, foam rises to top of can. This
    clears the air.
  • A charge of liquid N is added to the stout.
  • Can is sealed.
  • As liquid N boils off in can during
    pasteurisation (60 oC for 15-20 min), top of can
    pressurizes and forces the stout into the pod,
    thus compressing the ambient pressure N in the
    pod.
  • Equilibrium is reached at about 25 psi.

4
Mechanism of Growth
Melt
Crystal
There is a surface tension between phases
Solid molecules strongly attract other ice
molecules
5
Small Crystals
Solid molecules in small crystals are less
strongly attached than those in large crystals
6
The Kelvin Equation
r crystal radius s crystal solubility
7
Ostwald Ripening
8
Stages in Crystal Growth
  • Nucleation (homogeneous or heterogeneous)
  • Growth (no change in crystal number)
  • Perfection

9
What if it doesnt crystallize?
  • (at a molecular level, how do things crystallize?)

10
Fondant Manufacture
  • Cook to 114-120C
  • Cool quickly and gently to 45C
  • Vigorously mix until all clarity is lost and a
    creamed malleable mass is formed
  • Ripen and mature for 24 h

11
Molecular mobility
Thermodynamic pressure for phase transition
Glass transition temperature
Melting point
Temperature
12
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13
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14
Ice Crystals in Ice Cream
15
Sensory Effects of Ice Crystals
Sensory smoothness
Crystal detectability
25
50
Ice Crystal Size (mm)
16
Thermodynamics of Crystallization
Solution
Temperature
Glass
Concentration
17
Freezing Point Curve
18
Simplified Flow Chart
-18C
-15C
-5C
Freezer
Hardening
Distribution
19
The Ice-Cream Freezer
  • Mix is cooled to about -10oC
  • Vigorous mixing
  • Air is incorporated

20
Effect of Dasher
1. Ice crystals grow from cold wall
2. Dasher cuts off dendrite
3. Dendrite grows in barrel center
21
Domestic vs Commercial Freezers
  • Why do commercial freezers make smoother ice
    cream than domestic freezers?
  • Boiling ammonia 30C
  • Saturated brine 10C

22
Hardening
  • At the freezer exit the product is packed
  • and cooled to -18C in a tunnel freezer

100
How does the number and size of crystals change
in the hardening room?
Water frozen
50
0
0
-10
-20
-30
-40
Temp /C
23
Distribution
  • Plant freezers
  • Refrigerated distribution
  • Store freezers
  • Domestic freezers

transfer
transfer
transfer
How does the number and size of crystals change
during distribution?
24
Ice Coarsening
  • Ice cream may coarsen during storage,
    particularly if
  • stored too warm
  • temperature fluctuation during storage
  • Coarsened product is associated with a cold, icy,
    and gritty mouthfeel
  • Caused by many, large crystals (gt55 mm)

25
Effect of Unfrozen Matrix
Diffusion
Tg? Stabilizers?
26
Simplified Flow Chart
-18C
-15C
-5C
Freezer
Hardening
Distribution
35 mm 50 Frozen
45 mm 80 Frozen
Nucleation Growth
Growth
Melting Growth Ripening
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