In continuous aseptic processing involving liquid food suspensions, the
suspended particles must receive sufficient heat treatment without
affecting their nutritional or sensory qualities. Optimal process design
for the sterilization of particulates in liquid food therefore requires
good estimates of convective heat transfer coefficient at the fluid to
particle interface. Relatively few studies have been reported involving
coarse non-spherical particles in a confined flow. In this work, we have
used a combination of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations and
experiments to investigate the heat transfer rate to a coarse cubic
particle suspended in a laminar fluid flow within a circular tube. We
carried out the simulations using ANSYS Fluent software, whereas for the
experimental investigations, we used the stationary particle method,
employing a thermocouple to measure the particle temperature at the
centre. We conducted all tests using a sugar solution as the
heat-carrying fluid, and we employed two types of cubic particles, one
fabricated from peach fruit and one from polycarbonate plastic. We
varied the particle orientation, the fluid flow rate, and the radial
position of the particle in the tube. For all the above parameters, we
validated the time-temperature profiles of the particle obtained from
the simulations against the values measured in the experiments. The
temperature data from the simulations for the polycarbonate particle
showed fairly good agreement with the experimental data (within 5%) for
all flow rates and particle orientations. However, for the peach fruit
particle, the agreement between the simulated and experimental data was
unacceptable, especially for non-central positions in the tube, with
obvious deviations between the simulated and experimental data, where
the maximum deviations were between 15% and 25%. The evaluated average
fluid-particle heat transfer coefficients for polycarbonate particles
were compared with the values obtained from correlations in the
literature. The comparison resulted in either overestimation (up to
50%) or underestimation (up to 35%) of the average fluid-particle heat
transfer coefficients.
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In continuous aseptic processing involving liquid food suspensions, the
suspended particles must receive sufficient heat treatment without
affecting their nutritional or sensory qualities. Optimal process design
for the sterilization of particulates in liquid food therefore requires
good estimates of convective heat transfer coefficient at the fluid to
particle interface. Relatively few studies have been reported involving
coarse non-spherical particles in a confined flow. In this work, we...
»