PEREIRA, J. C. A.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9573902090639143; PEREIRA, Joan Carlos Alves.
Abstract:
The technological development of the fruit drying process plays a fundamental role in minimizing
food waste and reducing energy consumption used in the food processing industry. This work
aimed to carry out a study of the continuous and intermittent drying processes of osmotically pretreated
pieces of melon, cut in the shape of a parallelepiped, using empirical and diffusive models
to describe these processes, in addition to characterizing the product obtained in terms of
physicochemical, bioactive and color parameters. For this, experiments were carried out using an
incubator with mechanical agitation to carry out osmotic dehydration, in order to improve sensory
properties and prepare the samples for subsequent drying. Drying was carried out using an oven
with forced air circulation at temperatures of 50 and 70 °C involving continuous and intermittent
drying (with intermittency ratio α = 2/3) of the melon parallelepiped. As part of the study, drying
was modeled using empirical equations, considering the effective operating time, with the purpose
of comparing drying kinetics and analyzing the impact of intermittent drying on energy savings.
Drying kinetics are also described using diffusive models that use analytical and numerical
solutions of the diffusion equation, in cartesian coordinates, with first and third type boundary
conditions. The results indicate a reduction in drying time and higher drying rates with the
application of intermittency, providing greater energy savings. Among the empirical equations
analyzed, Page's equation is the one that best describes the continuous and intermittent drying of
pre-treated melon. The analytical model with boundary condition of the third type adequately
describes the continuous and intermittent drying of previously dehydrated melon parallelepiped. It
was found that the diffusion coefficient increases with the application of intermittency during
drying. The model proposed in this work, based on the empirical equations of Page and Lewis, was
able to describe the kinetics of intermittent drying, including the tempering period. According to
physicochemical and bioactive analyses, intermittent drying achieved greater preservation of
compounds compared to continuous drying.