1. Freeze-Drying of Blueberries: Effects of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Laser Perforation as Skin Pretreatment to Improve Mass Transfer, Primary Drying Time, and Quality
- Author
-
Jaime Ulloa, Pedro Valencia, Sergio Almonacid, Pablo Munzenmayer, Ricardo Simpson, Cristian Ramírez, and Marlene Pinto
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Health (social science) ,berry-busting ,Vapor flow ,Plant Science ,Berry ,lcsh:Chemical technology ,01 natural sciences ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) ,Microbiology ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Freeze-drying ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,Drying time ,010608 biotechnology ,Mass transfer ,lcsh:TP1-1185 ,Co2 laser ,skin perforation ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040401 food science ,Horticulture ,blueberry freeze-drying ,chemistry ,quality ,primary drying time ,Carbon dioxide ,Saturation (chemistry) ,Food Science - Abstract
Freeze-dried berry fruits are generally consumed as they are, whole and without peeling or cutting, as the conservation of their original shape and appearance is often desired for the final product. However, usually, berries are naturally wrapped by an outer skin that imparts a barrier to vapor flow during freeze-drying, causing berry busting. Photo-sequence, experimental, and theoretical methodologies were applied to evaluate the application of CO2 laser microperforations to blueberry skin. Under the same set of freeze-drying conditions, blueberries with and without perforations were processed. The results showed that the primary drying time was significantly reduced from 17 ±, 0.9 h for nontreated berries to 13 ±, 2.0 h when nine microperforations per berry fruit were made. Concomitantly, the quality was also significantly improved, as the percentage of nonbusted blueberries at the end of the process increased from an average of 47% to 86%. From a phenomenological perspective, the analysis of the mass transfer resistance of nontreated fruits, in agreement with reported studies, showed a Type II curvature, with a sharp decrease at low time, followed by a linear increase. In contrast, blueberries with nine perforations depicted a Type III regime, with a saturation curvature toward the time axis. It was demonstrated that CO2-laser microperforation has high potential as a skin pretreatment for the freeze-drying of blueberries.
- Published
- 2020