The Effect of Dryer Inlet and Outlet Air Temperatures and Protectant Solids on the Survival of<i>Lactococcus lactis</i>during Spray Drying
Amir Ghandi, Ian B. Powell, Xiao Dong Chen, Benu Adhikari
Drying Technology
Abstract
The influence of spray-drying conditions, inlet air temperature (130°C to 200°C), outlet air temperature (38°C to 65°C), drying medium (air and nitrogen) and milk-derived protectants (10%, 15%, and 25% lactose; 5% and 10% sodium caseinate; 10%, 25%, and 35% lactose:sodium caseinate (Lac:NaCas, 3:1)) on the survival of Lactococcus lactis ssp. cremoris was studied using a laboratory-scale spray dryer. An inlet air temperature of 130°C and 65°C as the outlet air temperature maintained high survival of the bacteria without sacrificing low moisture content. Inlet air temperature, previously considered to have no significant effect, was shown to play an important role in the survival of bacteria during spray drying. A mixture of Lac:NaCas (3:1) showed a better protective effect on the survival of bacteria than lactose and sodium caseinate individually, and this effect increased with increasing amount of protectant. The results were generalized by substituting whey protein isolate for sodium caseinate. Finally, the positive effect of elimination of oxygen was demonstrated both by replacing air with nitrogen and adding ascorbic acid as an oxygen scavenger to improve survival of the bacteria. Adding an oxygen scavenger would be a better candidate for industrial application considering the potential high cost of manufacturing if nitrogen was used as the atomization and/or drying medium.
Extracted Claims
5 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
outlet air temperature affects survival of bacteria
“An inlet air temperature of 130°C and 65°C as the outlet air temperature maintained high survival of the bacteria without sacrificing low moisture content.”
mixture of Lac:NaCas (3:1) improves survival of bacteria
“A mixture of Lac:NaCas (3:1) showed a better protective effect on the survival of bacteria than lactose and sodium caseinate individually, and this effect increased with increasing amount of protectan...”
spray drying affects survival of Lactococcus lactis
“The influence of spray-drying conditions, inlet air temperature (130°C to 200°C), outlet air temperature (38°C to 65°C), drying medium (air and nitrogen) and milk-derived protectants (10%, 15%, and 25...”