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Transport of cellular water during drying: An understanding of cell rupturing mechanism in apple tissue
- Source :
- Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.). 105
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- The cellular structure of food tissue is complex, and it is difficult to understand the morphological changes during drying. Three different cellular environments, namely intracellular space, intercellular space, and cell wall in food tissue contain a different proportion of water. It is crucial to understand the moisture migration mechanisms from different cellular environments during drying for improving energy efficiency and for ensuring better quality dried foods. Due to the lack of sufficient understanding of transport mechanisms of different types of water, existing mathematical models for food drying have been developed without considering these components separately. Therefore, the main aim of the present work is to investigate the transport mechanisms of cellular water during drying. Experiments were performed using 1H NMR T2 relaxometry to investigate the proportion of different types of water at various stages of drying, taking apple as a sample. It was found that intercellular water migrates from intracellular region to the intercellular spaces mainly through rupturing of the cell membranes during drying of apple tissue. The cell membrane ruptures take place at various stages of drying rather than collapsing at one time. Interestingly, the trends of rupturing the cell membranes follow mostly a uniform pattern as rupturing takes places almost at a regular interval. The results were compared with the rupturing mechanism in the low porous material (potato) reported in authors' previous study. It was also observed that most of the cell membranes of potato tissue rupture at middle stages of drying while apple tissues rapture mostly uniformly. The penetration rate of heat energy with the pressure gradient between intracellular and intercellular environments are the predominant factors that cause the rupturing the cell membranes.
- Subjects :
- Time Factors
Food Handling
Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
Cell
Cell wall
Cell membrane
0404 agricultural biotechnology
medicine
Desiccation
Moisture
Chemistry
Cell Membrane
Water
Biological Transport
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
Models, Theoretical
040401 food science
Membrane
medicine.anatomical_structure
Fruit
Malus
Biophysics
Intercellular space
Penetration rate
Porosity
Intracellular
Food Science
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18737145
- Volume :
- 105
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....16174216dd7e30bea2d5eb617ae4ffb9