English
Verb
drying
- present participle of dry
- For the food conservation method, see drying
(food).
Drying is a
mass
transfer process resulting in the removal of water
moisture or moisture from
another
solvent, by
evaporation from a
solid, semi-solid or
liquid (hereafter
product) to end in a solid state. To achieve this, there must be a
source of
heat, and a sink
of the
vapor thus
produced.
In the most common case, a gas stream, e.g., air,
applies the heat by convection and carries away the vapor as
humidity. Other
possibilities are vacuum drying, where heat is supplied by contact
conduction
or
radiation (or
microwaves) while the
produced vapor is removed by the
vacuum system. Another indirect
technique is drum drying, where a heated surface is used to provide
the energy and aspirators draw the vapor outside the room.
Freeze drying or lyophilization is a drying
method where the solvent is frozen prior to drying and is then
sublimed, i.e., passed to the gas phase directly from the solid
phase, below the melting point of the solvent. Freeze drying is
often carried out under high vacuum to allow drying to proceed at a
reasonable rate. This process avoids collapse of the solid
structure, leading to a low density, highly porous product, able to
regain the solvent quickly. In biological materials or foods,
freeze drying is regarded as one of the best if not the best method
to retain the initial properties. It was first used industrially to
produce dehydrated vaccines, and to bring dehydrated blood to
assist war casualties. Now freeze drying is increasingly used to
preserve some foods, especially for backpackers going to remote
areas. The method may keep protein quality intact, the same as the
activity of vitamins and bioactive compounds.
In turn, the mechanical extraction of the
solvent, e.g., water, by
centrifugation, is not
considered "drying". The ubiquitous term
dehydration may mean drying
of water-containing products as foods, but its meaning is more
vague, as it is also applied for water removal by
osmotic drive from a salt or
sugar solution. In medicine, dehydration is the situation by which
a person loses water by
respiration,
sweating and
evaporation and does not
incorporate, for whatever reason, the "make-up" water required to
keep the normal
physiological behavior of
the body.
Drying may be either a natural or an intentional
process.
The process of extreme drying is called
desiccation.
There is very extensive technical literature on
this subject, including several major textbooks and a dedicated
scientific journal (Drying Technology
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp?id=107829).
Methods of drying
- Application of heated air (convective or direct drying).
Air heating reduces air relative humidity, which is the driving
force for drying. Besides, higher temperatures speed up diffusion
of water inside the solids, so drying is faster. However, product
quality considerations limit the applicable rise to air
temperature. Too hot air almost completely dehydrates the solid
surface, so internal pores shrink and almost close, leading to
crust formation or "case hardening".
- Indirect or contact drying (heating through a hot wall), as
drum drying, vacuum drying.
- Dielectric drying (radiofrequency or microwaves being absorbed
inside the material) It is the focus of intense research nowadays.
It may be used to assist air drying or vacuum drying.
- Freeze
drying Is increasingly applied to dry foods, beyond its already
classical pharmaceutical or medical applications. It keeps
biological properties of proteins, and retains vitamins and
bioactive compounds. Pressure may be reduced by a vacuum pump. If
using a vacuum pump, the vapor produced by sublimation is removed
from the system by converting it into ice in a condenser, operating
at very low temperatures, outside the freeze drying chamber.
- Supercritical
drying (superheated steam drying) involves steam drying of
products containing water. Strange as it seems, this is possible
because the water in the product is boiled off, and joined with the
drying medium, increasing its flow. It is usually employed in
closed circuit and allows a proportion of latent heat to be
recovered by recompression, a feature which is not possible with
conventional air drying, for instance. May have potential for foods
if carried out at reduced pressure, to lower the boiling point.
- Natural
air drying takes place when materials are dried with unheated
forced air, taking advantage of its natural drying potential. The
process is slow and weather-dependent, so a wise strategy "fan
off-fan on" must be devised considering the following conditions:
Air temperature, relative humidity and moisture content and
temperature of the material being dried. Grains are increasingly
dried with this technique, and the total time (including fan off
and on periods) may last from one week to various months, if a
winter rest can be tolerated in cold areas.
Applications of drying
Hundreds of millions of tonnes of wheat,corn,
soybean, rice other grains as sorghum, sunflower seeds,
rapeseed/canola, barley, oats, etc., are dried in
grain
dryers. In the main agricultural countries, drying comprises
the reduction of moisture from about 17-30%w/w to values between 8
and 15%w/w, depending on the grain. The final moisture content for
drying must be adequate for storage. The more oil the grain has,
the lower its storage moisture content will be (though its initial
moisture for drying will also be lower). Cereals are often dried to
14% w/w, while oilseeds, to 12.5% (soybeans), 8-9% (sunflower) and
9% (peanuts). Drying is carried out as a requisite for safe
storage, in order to inhibit microbial growth. However, low
temperatures in storage are also highly recommended to avoid
degradative reactions and, especially, the growth of insects and
mites. A good maximum storage temperature is about 18°C. The
largest dryers are normally used "Off-farm", in elevators, and are
of the continuous type: Mixed-flow dryers are preferred in Europe,
while Cross-flow dryers in the USA. In Argentina, both types are
usually found. Continuous flow dryers may produce up to 100 metric
tonnes of dried grain per hour. The depth of grain the air must
traverse in continuous dryers range from some 0.15 m in Mixed flow
dryers to some 0.30 m in Cross-Flow. Batch dryers are mainly used
"On-Farm", particularly in the USA and Europe. They normally
consist of a bin, with heated air flowing horizontally from a
narrow-diameter cylinder through a perforated metal sheet, placed
in the center of the bin. Air passes through a path of grain some
0.50 m deep in radial direction and leaves the system through
another perforated sheet. The usual drying times range from 1 h to
4 h depending on how much water must be removed, the air
temperature, and the grain depth. In the USA, continuous
counterflow dryers may be found on-farm, adapting a bin to slowly
drying the grain, and removing the dried product using an auger.
Grain drying is an active area of manufacturing and research. Now
it is possible to "simulate" the performance of a dryer with
computer programs based on equations that represent the physics and
physical chemistry of drying.
Drum
Drying
The drum dryer technology has kept its position
of importance. Today, in foods, potato puree is dehydrated as well
as banana and tomato purees to produce dehydrated flakes
Spray drying is an important technique to produce
dried powders. The principle is that a pumpable feed is first
atomized, i.e, converted in a fog of droplets of about 100
micrometers in diameter, which dry very fast while falling by
gravity, accompanied by heated air. The dried particles eventually
exit through the bottom of the dryer and is separated from the
drying air by a cyclone, or a system based on cyclones plus bag
filters or electrostatic precipitators. Milk powder is possibly the
most popular product, and tomato powder is becoming very important.
On the other hand, washing powder is an example product of the
chemical process industry. The production of dehydrated natural
flavors and essences is very important and is growing together with
encapsulation, a technique devised to trap a volatile, but large
molecule (as the flavor compound) inside a dry particle, the walls
of which develop on drying and are permeable to water flux but not
to the flux of the larger volatiles. This principle of selective
diffusion was first developed by the Dutch researcher Thijssen, in
Eindhoven, during the 1970's. Spray dryers differ in the type of
atomizer, the relative directions of air and product flows, the
chamber design, type of drying agent (air, nitrogen) in the system
charactersitics ( closed or open circuit), among other features.
Equipment can be very large, of up to 20 m tall.
- Devices commonly called dryers are used for efficient
drying of various things: hair after a shower, candies at candy factories,
semiconductor
wafers
- Most processes giving a solid product involve a drying step
- Drying is
often used to preserve
food
- The production of anhydrous alcohol requires azeotropic
distillation, or a membrane process. The 96° mixture of
ethanol-water cannot be separated by distillation, as it
constitutes an azeotrope ("boiling without variation", from the
Greek)
- Wood
drying is an integral part of timber processing
drying in Bosnian: Sušenje
drying in German: Trocknung
drying in French: Séchage
drying in Dutch: Drogen
drying in Portuguese: Secagem
drying in Finnish: Haihdutus
drying in Chinese: 干燥
Sanforizing, air-drying,
anhydration,
atrophy,
attenuation, blast-freezing,
bottling,
brining,
canning,
consumption,
corning,
curing,
dehumidification,
dehydrating,
dehydration,
desiccant,
desiccation,
desiccative,
drainage, dry-curing, drying
up,
emaceration,
emaciation,
embalming,
evaporation,
evaporative,
exsiccant,
exsiccative, freeze-drying,
freezing,
fuming,
insolation,
irradiation,
jerking,
marination,
mummification,
parching,
pickling,
potting,
preshrinkage,
quick-freezing,
refrigeration,
salting,
searing,
seasoning,
shrinkage,
shrinking,
shriveling,
siccative,
smoking,
stuffing,
taxidermy,
thinning,
tinning,
wasting,
withering