Relating the stickiness property of foods undergoing drying and dried products to their surface energetics


Autoria(s): Bhandari, B. R.; Howes, T.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Stickiness is a common problem encountered in food handling and processing, and also during consumption. Stickiness is observed as adhesion of the food to processing equipment surfaces or cohesion within the food particulate or mass. An important operation where this undesirable behavior of food is manifested is drying. This occurs particularly during drying of high-sugar and high-fat foods. To date, the stickiness of foods during drying or dried powder has been investigated in relation to their viscous and glass transition properties. The importance of contact surface energy of the equipment has been ignored in many analyses, despite the fact that some drying operations have reported using low-energy contact surfaces in drying equipment to avoid the problems caused by stickiness. This review discusses the fundamentals of adhesion and cohesion mechanisms and relates these phenomena to drying and dried products.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76065

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Taylor & Francis Inc

Palavras-Chave #Engineering, Chemical #Engineering, Mechanical #surface energy #adhesion #cohesion #drying #food #Sugar-rich Foods #Instrumental Measurement #Glass-transition #Adhesion #Powder #Milk #Agglomeration #Performance #Mechanisms #Particles #C1 #290102 Food Engineering #670104 Fruit and vegetable products (incl. fruit juices) #670105 Dairy products
Tipo

Journal Article