SANTOS, N. C.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/2693445744050702; SANTOS, Newton Carlos.
Resumen:
The present work aimed to determine the thermophysical properties of apples during
cooling, as well as to evaluate the effect of storage time on the maintenance of physical,
chemical and bioactive compounds characteristics kept at room temperature and
refrigerated. The Fuji apple was subjected to cooling kinetics in a natural convection
household refrigerator and its thermophysical properties were determined assuming the
geometry of an equivalent sphere. The position of the thermocouple inside the apple was
not determined during the experiment and is therefore unknown and determined using
analytical and numerical solutions. A heat conduction software (Solver) was developed
to solve the inverse problem, using the spherical geometry of the diffusion equation and
the boundary condition of the third type, obtaining the values of the thermal properties
and their uncertainties. The direct problem was the solution of the partial differential
equation, where from the developed solver it was possible to simulate the cooling kinetics
of a previously specified point within the sphere. Finally, a storage study of apples at
room temperature (25 °C) and refrigeration temperature (4 °C) was carried out. The
physical and chemical parameters of bioactive compounds were evaluated at 7-day
intervals until they were rotten. The mean values of diffusivity and convective coefficient
of heat transfer were (@ = 1.42 ± 0.11) × 10-7 m2.s-1 and (@ = 3.196 ± 0.039) × 10-6 m2.s-1, respectively. Since the diffusivity value obtained by the proposed model was consistent with the value obtained from the Riedel correlation estimate ( = 1.38 x 10-7 m2.s-1). The adjustment of the simulated curve to the experimental points presented coefficient of determination (R2) greater than 0.99 and low values of the chi-square function ( @ 2 ). The thermocouple position in the equivalent sphere by numerical and analytical solution was r = 6.6 mm and r = 7.7 mm, respectively. Presenting a difference of 14.3% between the two methods used. It was observed during the storage under the two studied conditions an increase in the total soluble solids contents, total titratable acidity, water activity, humidity, anthocyanins, flavonoids and chromatic coordinates (a*, b* and C*); reduction in pH, firmness, color coordinate (L*), vitamin C, total phenolic compounds and chlorophyll (“a”, “b” and total). Therefore, it can be concluded that the spherical
geometry and the boundary condition of the third type was adequate to describe the heat
transfer process for the apple and cooling was a viable technique for postharvest
conservation of apples, allowing a storage up to 42 days with greater preservation of
bioactive compounds.