4.5 Article

Wave-absorbing material aided microwave freeze-drying of vitamin C solution frozen with preformed pores

Journal

DRYING TECHNOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 13, Pages 2025-2038

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07373937.2020.1752229

Keywords

Freeze-drying; saturation; drying time; wave-absorbing material; microwave

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21676042]
  2. Liaoning Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [201602167]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The use of soft-ice freezing technique helps prevent structural collapse during freeze-drying, while porous frozen materials significantly enhance mass transfer in the freeze-drying process. Additionally, the presence of wave-absorbing material and microwave heating can greatly improve heat transfer, making the simultaneous intensification of heat and mass transfer in freeze-drying feasible and effective.
To explore the effect of wave-absorbing material aided microwave heating on freeze-drying of initially porous frozen material, a lab-scale microwave freeze-dryer was designed with solid-state source selected as the microwave source instead of the traditionally used magnetron. Vitamin C was employed as the solute in aqueous solution. Soft-ice freezing technique was adopted to prepare solid and porous frozen materials. Experimental results showed that the solid sample by soft-ice freezing can successfully avoid structural collapse during freeze-drying, and the porous frozen material can significantly intensify mass transfer of the freeze-drying process. Under the operating conditions of 35 degrees C and 20 Pa, the drying time of the porous sample with the initial saturation of 0.25 decreased by 30.4% compared with the solid one, and the residual moisture content of dried product decreased with the initial saturation reducing. SEM images of the dried products revealed that the porous material had a loose pore structure and a tenuous solid skeleton, which is favorable to the migration of sublimated/desorbed vapor and the desorption of bound moisture. Evidences also showed that appropriately increasing radiation temperature led to reducing the drying time, while changing chamber pressure had an insignificant effect on freeze-drying. With sintered silicon carbide (SiC), which is a kind of wave-absorbing material, as the supporting pad of sample, microwave heating can greatly improve heat transfer of the freeze-drying process. Under the same operating conditions, the drying time of the porous sample with the microwave input power of 5 W was 28.1% shorter than that of the same sample without microwave heating, and 50.0% shorter than that of the solid sample for conventional freeze-drying. Wave-absorbing material aided microwave freeze-drying of the porous material frozen with preformed pores is a feasible and effective way to achieve the simultaneous intensification of heat and mass transfer in freeze-drying.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available