4.7 Article

Modelling swelling effects in real espresso extraction using a 1-dimensional coarse-grained model

Journal

JOURNAL OF FOOD ENGINEERING
Volume 365, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2023.111843

Keywords

Coffee extraction; Computational fluid dynamics; Particle swelling; Coarse-grained model

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This study investigates the effects of swelling on espresso extraction by incorporating a particle-level swelling model into a one-dimensional bed-level extraction model. The results show that swelling only slightly affects the yield and strength at a fixed flow rate, but considerably enhances the strength at a fixed pressure drop. The finer the coffee particles, the more pronounced the enhancement. It is suggested that better control of yield and strength can be achieved by fixing the flow rate in an espresso machine. It is also indicated that numerical extraction simulations, when properly incorporated with relevant physical effects, can be used to predict the extraction kinetics and guide the design and production of espresso machines.
Swelling of coffee particle is difficult to measure and control, but it could have significant effects on espresso extraction. In this article, we incorporate a particle-level swelling model to a one dimensional bed-level extraction model to investigate the effects of swelling on extraction. Realistic geometric parameters and brewing parameters are used. A small degree of swelling is assumed to be present (approximate to 3.6% in size). Our simulation results show that swelling only slightly affects the yield and the strength if the flow rate is fixed. However, when the pressure drop is fixed swelling will considerably enhance the strength at both fixed brewing time and fixed brewing mass. The finer the coffee particles the more pronounced the enhancement. By tuning the partition coefficient, the one-dimensional extraction model is shown to be able to capture very well the extraction kinetics of a fixing-flow-rate espresso machine in low beverage mass regime (M-c < 30 g). Our results suggest that better yield and strength control can be achieved by fixing the flow rate in an espresso machine. Moreover, it is indicated that when properly incorporated with relevant physical effects, numerical extraction simulations can be used to predict the extraction kinetics of espresso machine and guide their design and production.

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