Heat Pump Drying of Green Sweet Pepper
U. S. Pal, Md. Khalid Khan, Santanu Mohanty
Drying Technology
Abstract
Abstract Thin-layer drying experiments under controlled conditions were conducted for green sweet pepper in heat pump dryer at 30, 35, and 40°C and hot air dryer at 45°C with relative humidities ranging from 19 to 55%. The moisture content of sweet pepper slices reduced exponentially with drying time. As the temperature increased, the drying curve exhibited a steeper slope, thus exhibiting an increase in drying rate. Drying of green sweet pepper took place mainly under the falling-rate period. The Page equation was found to be better than the Lewis equation to describe the thin-layer drying of green sweet pepper with higher coefficient of determination and lower root mean square error. Drying in heat pump dryer at 40°C took less time with higher drying rate and specific moisture extraction rate as compared to hot air drying at 45°C due to lower relative humidity of the drying air in a heat pump dryer though the drying air temperature was less. The retention of total chlorophyll content and ascorbic acid content was observed to be more in heat pump–dried samples with higher rehydration ratios and sensory scores. The quality parameters showed a declining trend with increase in drying air temperature from 30 to 45°C. Keeping in view the energy consumption and quality attributes of dehydrated products, it is proposed to dry green sweet pepper at 35°C in heat pump dryer. Keywords: Characteristic drying curveDimensionless drying rateMathematical modelThin-layer drying Acknowledgement The authors are thankful to the Indian Council of Agricultural Research for providing necessary financial support and Orissa University of Agriculture and Technology for providing the infrastructure for the research work. Notes a Average moisture content over the drying period corresponding to peak drying rate. a Each value of sensory score is average of 10 observations on a 9-point scale.
Extracted Claims
6 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
chlorophyll content was better retained in heat pump-dried samples
“The retention of total chlorophyll content and ascorbic acid content was observed to be more in heat pump–dried samples”
rehydration ratio was higher in heat pump-dried samples
“The retention of total chlorophyll content and ascorbic acid content was observed to be more in heat pump–dried samples with higher rehydration ratios”
drying time decreased with increasing temperature
“Drying of green sweet pepper took place mainly under the falling-rate period”