4.6 Article

Quality of Milled Rice from Large-Scale Dried Paddy Rice by Hot Air Combined with Radio Frequency Heating

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr9122277

Keywords

paddy; hot air drying; radio frequency heating; drying efficiency; rice quality

Funding

  1. Postharvest Technology Innovation Center, Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation, Bangkok, Thailand
  2. Yont Phol Dee Co., Ltd., Nakhon Sawan, Thailand

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The combination of radio frequency heating and convective drying can significantly reduce drying time and specific energy consumption. Increasing RF heating temperature has limited impact on paddy quality, while it can have statistical application value in color evaluation.
A scaled-up process for paddy drying was developed using hot air (HA) combined with radio frequency (RF) heating. The study was conducted using hot air (control treatment) arranged in descending order in four temperature levels, namely 80 degrees C at moisture content of 25-26%, 70 degrees C at moisture content of 20-25%, 60 degrees C at moisture content of 17-20%, and 50 degrees C at moisture content of 13-17%, as well as with hot air combined with radio frequency (HA/RF) at different paddy temperatures (45-60 degrees C) by adjusting the appropriate RF energy when passing through RF heating chamber, namely HA/RF45, HA/RF50, HA/RF55, and HA/RF60. Each treatment was performed in three replicates and data were statistically analyzed in a randomized complete block design. The quality attributes of paddies affected by the drying process were assessed: fissure percentage, color, milling quality, and sensory evaluation. The drying efficiency showed that the drying time and the specific energy consumption could be decreased by up to 54.44% and 23.17% at HA/RF60 and HA/RF45, respectively. As the RF heating temperature increased, the fissure percentage of brown rice kernels at HA/RF45 and HA was not significantly impacted. Regarding color evaluation, combining RF heating and convective drying at all given conditions could be statistically applied in terms of the b*, WI, and Delta E* value. Considering the milling yield of HA as the baseline, head rice yield was maximized at HA/RF45, while bran yield reached the maximum at HA/RF60. The liking score of cooked rice after it was dried using the HA method was the highest. This study concludes that the HA/RF45 was the most appropriate drying condition, and this may provide preliminary exposure to the industrial drying of paddies.

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