The development of a simulation strategy and modelling algorithm with potential application to a variety of food process operations, particularly to thermal processing of canned foodstuffs has been undertaken. A review of published work identified previous efforts in the development of mathematical models for thennal process operations, including their limitations. The review showed that Finite Difference methods have found wide application in modelling conduction heating of canned foods. A similar model would be a useful numerical yardstick for validating any developments in this work. The great diversity of food handling operations have been grouped into a more manageable small number of classes. Such classification recognised that sets of related operations share common characteristics and functions which are the basis for the development of mathematical models for each class of operations. The strategy developed involved hierarchical decomposition of unit operations into assemblies of basic modules and mathematical modelling of these basics. A model of the operation can then be constructed simply by selecting and arranging the required basic units with due consideration to the boundary conditions of the physical problem. For transient operations with positional variation, these elementary modules have been termed "zones". The range of basic zones to model representative units have been identified. This hierarchical zone-model simulation has been demonstrated for heat transfer in a cylindrical container and for batch retort operation. The repeated use of the same unit modules for different operations makes this a flexible and robust strategy. The mathematics of zone-modelling has been developed for heat conduction in foodstuffs in cylindrical containers. To ensure accuracy, the numerical integration steps were rigorously monitored using mathematical procedures well-established for this purpose. The validity of the model has been tested against the analytical and implicit finite difference solutions. Generally, zone models agreed within 1 % of these standard yardsticks with the difference becoming negligible when sufficiently small integration steps or zone sizes were used. The effectiveness of zone-modelling as a simulation tool has been established using experimental data and the various sources of discrepancy between the model and experimental data accounted for. Thermocouple measurement errors have been found to have contributed most significantly to this discrepancy. Detailed analysis and modelling of thermocouple measurement errors has been carried out using zone-modelling to simulate the true experimental system which accounted for the presence of a thermocouple. The result has been an improved agreement between experiment and the zonemodel, and it also demonstrated the flexibility of the modelling technique. Further resuhs have shown that the discrepancy varied with thermocouple size and type. The contributions to error of temperature variability of, and of uncertainty in, thermophysical properties of the food were discussed. , The flexibility and robustness of zone-modelling have been further demonstrated using some practical situations including heat transfer to foodstuff in flexible packaging - such as sausage rolls, heat transfer in a food container with varying headspaces and the consequence of steam interruption during processing. Examples have been discussed of other transient processes that could similarly be modelled using this technique. The main achievements of this work include the application of hierarchical simulation and zonemodelling techniques to food processing and the development of a novel mathematical modelling technique which is more flexible than finite differences. Moreover, the applications of zonemodelling to the study of thermocouple errors, to the study of the consequences of steam interruption during thermal processing, and to heat transfer in foods in flexible containers, are developments of interest in food processing. It is concluded that the hierarchical simulation and zone modelling algorithm are robust and flexible techniques with potential applications in food process simulation .
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:245061 |
Date | January 1997 |
Creators | Kassim, Hamida Omowunmi |
Publisher | London South Bank University |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
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