Title: Water Activity, Drying
1Water Activity,Drying
2Reducing water
- Third major method of food preservation
- Makes water less available to microorganisms
- Reduces mobility of water slows reactions
- Reduces the weight and volume of foods
3History
- Drying is one of the oldest methods of
preservation - Sun and wind drying
- Smoking, and salting
- Drying herbs, meats, fruits and vegetables.
- Historians have credited the ability to store
foods with the start of civilization. - Today, it is still the simplest, cheapest, and
most widely used method in the World.
4History
- Sun drying around the Mediterranean
- Figs, raisins, dates, apricots
- Andes potatoes Chuno
- Native Americans Pemmican
- Central Asia pastrami
5Simple drying system
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10Fish drying on beach
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12Rack systems
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14Drying Fish Heads
Geothermal energy is used (Iceland)
15Water in foods
- Constituents in foods bind water in varying
degrees - Hygroscopic (salt, sugars, proteins.)
- Non-hygroscopic (lipids)
16Water activity
- In the equilibrium state
- mo RT ln(f / fo)
- where m (J mol-1) is the chemical potential of
the system i.e. thermodynamic activity or energy
per mole of substance - mo is the chemical potential of the pure
material at the temperature T(K) - R is the gas constant (8.314 J mol-1 K-1)
- f is the fugacity or the escaping tendency of a
substance - fo is escaping tendency of pure material
17Water activity
- The activity of a species is defined as
- a f/fo
- fugacity is closely approximated by the vapor
pressure (f p) so - aw f/fo _at_ p/po
- partial pressure of water over
food - Water activity ---------------------------------
------------- - vapor pressure of water
at the same T
18Partial pressure
Pure water
Solution
P, T
P, T
When there is a solute in water, it lowers the
vapor pressure of water over the solution
19Partial Pressure
- For ideal, very dilute solutions, Raoults law
pwater po,water xwater
p partial pressure of water po vapor pressure
of water (from the steam tables) X mole
fraction of water
pwater / po,water xwater
20Raoults law
1.0
Pure water
Ideal dilute
X Mole fraction water
Non-ideal concentrated
0.0
1.0
0.0
p/po
21State of water
- Free water (available to microorganisms,
available to chemical reactions either as a
reactant, or as the transport medium for the
reactants to move together, and the products to
move away). - Bound water (Tightly bound to individual sites
hydroxyl groups of polysaccharides, carbonyl and
amino groups of proteins, hydrogen bonding sites,
ion-dipole sites, and other strong interactions
not available as a solvent).
22Isotherms
- (Constant temperature)
- Correlation between water activity of food and
its water content. - Water content is generally expressed in dry
weight basis.
23Dry basis / wet basis
- M wet basis moisture content
(water/total100) - X dry basis moisture content (water/solid100)
solid
total
water
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25Hysteresis
- When a dry food is re-hydrated, its aw is higher,
at the same moisture level, than a wet food. - Drying causes irreversible changes in food, so
adding water does not bring it back to its
original state. - Ink bottle theory
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27Effect of Temperature
- For most foods, when T increases, then the aw
increases at the same moisture level. - For some food with much sugar, increase in T may
increase the solubility of sugar, and therefore
decrease aw.
28Isotherm Equations
- Not possible to theoretically predict aw of any
food for a given water content - Measure the aw vs moisture content
- Fit isotherm equations, select the best.
- Isotherm equations are empirical
29Halseys equation
X d.b. moisture content B1, B2 experimental
parameters
30Bradleys equation
X d.b. moisture content B1, B2 experimental
parameters
31Hendersons equation
X d.b. moisture content B1, B2 experimental
parameters
32Iglesias/Chirife equation
X d.b. moisture content B1, B2 experimental
parameters X0.5 X at aw0.5
33Kuhns equation
X d.b. moisture content B1, B2 experimental
parameters
34Oswins equation
X d.b. moisture content B1, B2 experimental
parameters
35Smiths equation
X d.b. moisture content B1, B2 experimental
parameters
36BET equation
X d.b. moisture content Xm monolayer
moisture C experimental parameter BET should
not be used for awgt0.5
37GAB equation
k correction factor for multilayers Xm
monolayer moisture content C Guggenheim constant
Hl Heat of condensation of pure water vapor, at
T, kJ/Kg mol Hq Total heat of sorption of the
multilayers, kJ/Kg mol Hm Total heat of sorption
of the first layer on primary sites, kJ/Kg mol R
gas constant, 8.314 kJ/Kg-mol K T
temperature, must be in K
38Changes with temperature
- Most isotherm equations do not have a parameter
that involves temperature. - GAB has temperature parameters
- Other isotherm equations can be modified
(extended) to include temperature
39Extended Equations
Modified Chung-Pfost Modified
Halsey Modified Oswin Modified Henderson
40aw and microorganisms
- The lowest aw at which the majority of food
spoilage bacteria will grow is about 0.90. - Staphylococcus aureus under anaerobic conditions
is inhibited at an aw of 0.91, but aerobically
the aw level is 0.86. - The aw for mold and yeast growth is about 0.61
with the lower limit for growth of mycotoxigenic
molds at 0.78 aw
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42Effects of aw
- Enzymatic reactions slow down and stop as aw is
reduced mobility, reactant (hydrolysis) - Non-enzymatic reactions as aw increases,
reaction rates increase mobility then decrease
(dilution effects)
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44Effects of aw
- Lipid oxidation
- In dry food as water increases O2 absorption
increases - -Peroxide formation decreases as water increases
below monolayer. H bonds to hydroperoxides reduce
their rate of decomposition - Trace metal are hydrated
- Metals form insoluble hydroxides
- At monolayer, oxidation rate is minimum.
- As moisture increases, oxidation rate increases
- Mobility, reactant, swelling of matrices
45Drying
- The removal of water from fish muscle to extend
shelf life - Requires input of thermal energy
- Sun, wind, flame, electrical etc.
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48Drying mechanisms
- Drying is a sequence of events that take place in
two main phases - Phase 1 (constant rate period)
- Water is being removed from the fish surface
- Phase 2 (falling rate period)
- Water is removed from the fish muscle
- Water migrates to the fish surface
- Water is removed from the fish surface
- Water is removed from the atmosphere surrounding
the fish surface - If too rapid we can get case hardening
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50Constant Drying Rate Period
- There must be free, contiguous water at the
surface. - Then, the air sees water, and not the food.
Rate of drying depends on air properties - This period may or may not exist in foods
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52Falling drying rate period
- After the free water layer is partially
evaporated, there are dry patches at the
surface - The water molecules are more tightly bound to the
food, and are more difficult to remove - Drying rate falls
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54Co-current / counter-current
- The air and the food exchange
- Heat (the air supplies heat)
- Moisture (the food loses moisture)
- Contact can happen co-currently, or
counter-currently.
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57Types of driers
- Belt driers
- Tunnel driers
- Spray driers
- Drum driers
- Fluidized bed driers
- Freeze driers
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60Advanced automated driers
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62Tray Drier
63Solar Driers
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74Tray drier
Vortex drier
75Quality
- Irreversible changes in dried foods
- Vitamin C can be oxidized easily
- Lipids can be oxidized
- Case hardening (too fast a drying rate may dry
the outer layers that become impermeable to
water, and further drying stops)
76Problems with dried fish
- If environmental T is too high and fish is too
wet - Molds (Awgt0.75)
- Grow very well when drying in tropical areas
- Black spots, which can be scraped off (fish not
unfit for consumption) - Aerobic spoilage bacteria (if non-salted)
- If salted (solar salt) can get halophiles growing
- Pink colonies
- Major problem with salted and dried cod
- Insects
- Insect parts and eggs a major quality problem
- Flies (Dipteria) lay eggs and can spread disease
- Larvae feeds on the fish
- Less problem with fish pre-drying
- Salting can deter flies
- Some use insecticides on fish!
- Also beetles (India) and roaches (post-drying)
- Rodents and birds are a constant problem
77Problems with dried fish (cont.)
- Lipid oxidation (rancidity)
- Protein denaturation
- Get muscle fragmentation
- Case hardening
- Flesh soft on the inside and spoiled by bacteria
(extreme putrid odor)
78Pilot plant / lab
- See the water activity meter
- Observe the air drier
- Observe the drum drier
- Observe the spray drier