Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study

Industrial malting operations use ~800kWh/t of energy to produce the heat required to kiln malt. Electromagnetic heating technologies are suggested as a way to potentially improve the energy efficiency of the kilning processing. In this work, the potential for using electromagnetic heating to dry ma...

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Main Authors: Ferrari-John, R.S., Katrib, Juliano, Zerva, Evgenia, Davies, Nigel, Cook, David J., Dodds, Chris, Kingman, S.W.
Format: Article
Published: Springer Verlag 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39548/
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author Ferrari-John, R.S.
Katrib, Juliano
Zerva, Evgenia
Davies, Nigel
Cook, David J.
Dodds, Chris
Kingman, S.W.
author_facet Ferrari-John, R.S.
Katrib, Juliano
Zerva, Evgenia
Davies, Nigel
Cook, David J.
Dodds, Chris
Kingman, S.W.
author_sort Ferrari-John, R.S.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Industrial malting operations use ~800kWh/t of energy to produce the heat required to kiln malt. Electromagnetic heating technologies are suggested as a way to potentially improve the energy efficiency of the kilning processing. In this work, the potential for using electromagnetic heating to dry malt to commercially acceptable moisture levels, whilst preserving the activity of enzymes critical for downstream brewing processes is investigated. The 2450 MHz bulk dielectric properties of malt at moisture contents consistent with those occurring at different points in the kilning process are evaluated; 12% is shown to be a critical moisture level below which drying becomes more energy intensive. Calculated penetration depths of electromagnetic energy in malt at radio frequency are 100 fold higher than at microwave frequencies, showing a significant advantage for commercial scale batch processing. The moisture contents and alpha and beta amylase activity of malt subjected to RF heating at different temperatures, treatment times and RF energy inputs in the intermediate and bound water drying regions were determined. It is shown for the first time that whilst significantly reduced process times are attainable, significant energy efficiency improvements compared to conventional kilning can only be achieved at higher product temperatures and thus at the expense of enzyme survival. It is suggested that RF heating may be feasible where higher bulk temperatures are not critical for downstream use of the material or when used in hybrid systems.
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spelling nottingham-395482020-05-04T18:24:53Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39548/ Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study Ferrari-John, R.S. Katrib, Juliano Zerva, Evgenia Davies, Nigel Cook, David J. Dodds, Chris Kingman, S.W. Industrial malting operations use ~800kWh/t of energy to produce the heat required to kiln malt. Electromagnetic heating technologies are suggested as a way to potentially improve the energy efficiency of the kilning processing. In this work, the potential for using electromagnetic heating to dry malt to commercially acceptable moisture levels, whilst preserving the activity of enzymes critical for downstream brewing processes is investigated. The 2450 MHz bulk dielectric properties of malt at moisture contents consistent with those occurring at different points in the kilning process are evaluated; 12% is shown to be a critical moisture level below which drying becomes more energy intensive. Calculated penetration depths of electromagnetic energy in malt at radio frequency are 100 fold higher than at microwave frequencies, showing a significant advantage for commercial scale batch processing. The moisture contents and alpha and beta amylase activity of malt subjected to RF heating at different temperatures, treatment times and RF energy inputs in the intermediate and bound water drying regions were determined. It is shown for the first time that whilst significantly reduced process times are attainable, significant energy efficiency improvements compared to conventional kilning can only be achieved at higher product temperatures and thus at the expense of enzyme survival. It is suggested that RF heating may be feasible where higher bulk temperatures are not critical for downstream use of the material or when used in hybrid systems. Springer Verlag 2016-12-21 Article PeerReviewed Ferrari-John, R.S., Katrib, Juliano, Zerva, Evgenia, Davies, Nigel, Cook, David J., Dodds, Chris and Kingman, S.W. (2016) Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study. Food and Bioprocess Technology . ISSN 1935-5130 Microwave Radio frequency Malt Kilning http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11947-016-1849-0 doi:10.1007/s11947-016-1849-0 doi:10.1007/s11947-016-1849-0
spellingShingle Microwave
Radio frequency
Malt
Kilning
Ferrari-John, R.S.
Katrib, Juliano
Zerva, Evgenia
Davies, Nigel
Cook, David J.
Dodds, Chris
Kingman, S.W.
Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study
title Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study
title_full Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study
title_fullStr Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study
title_full_unstemmed Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study
title_short Electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study
title_sort electromagnetic heating for industrial kilning of malt: a feasibility study
topic Microwave
Radio frequency
Malt
Kilning
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39548/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39548/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39548/