Volume 23, Issue 2 pp. 145-161

EFFECT OF INSOLUBLE PARTICLES UPON SOLID INCLUSION LEVELS IN ICE FORMED ON A SUBCOOLED STAINLESS STEEL SURFACE

PING CHEN

PING CHEN

Food Science and Process Engineering Group Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering The University of Auckland Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand

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XIAO DONG CHEN

Corresponding Author

XIAO DONG CHEN

Food Science and Process Engineering Group Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering The University of Auckland Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand

1 Corresponding authorSearch for more papers by this author
KEVIN W. FREE

KEVIN W. FREE

Food Science and Process Engineering Group Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering The University of Auckland Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand

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ABSTRACT

This study employed an insoluble solid particle, i.e. a potato starch used as an example, to investigate the impact of the concentration of such particles suspended in water (with solid loading of 5, 10, 20 and 30 wt%) upon the solid inclusion levels in ice layers formed on a sub-cooled smooth stainless steel plate surface. The effects of ice growth rate, bulk concentration and suspension velocity on insoluble solid inclusion, i.e. potato starch mass fraction, in ice layer were studied. The experiments, where potato starch is added into aqueous sucrose solutions or the reverse where sucrose is added into starch suspension, were also carried out to investigated effect of the starch particles on sucrose inclusion in ice and effect of solute (sucrose) on starch particle inclusion in ice. It has been found that solid inclusion in ice increases with increasing bulk concentration and average ice growth rate, at constant solution and coolant velocities, and increasing suspension velocity can help pure ice formation. The average distribution coefficient of sucrose in ice layer formed from sucrose solution does not appear to be affected by the addition of potato starch. However, the average distribution coefficient of potato starch in ice layer formed from suspension is influenced by sucrose concentration quite significantly.

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