Crop Process Engineering 3(2+1)
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Lesson 13. Principle of Size Reduction
13.0 Introduction
In many food processes it is frequently necessary to reduce the size of solid materials for different purposes. In this case, size
reduction may aid other processes such as expression and extraction, or may shorten heat treatments such as blanching and
cooking. Comminution is the generic term used for size reduction and includes different operations such as crushing, grinding,
milling, mincing, and dicing. Most of these terms are related to a particular application, e.g., milling of cereals, mincing of beef,
dicing of tubers, or grinding of spices. The reduction mechanism consists of deforming the food piece until it breaks or tears.
Breaking of hard materials along cracks or defects in their structure is achieved by applying diverse forces.
The objective of comminution is to produce smaller particles from larger ones. Smaller particles are the desired product either
because of their large surface or because of their shape, size, and number. The energy efficiency of the operation can be related to
the new surface formed by the reduction in size. The geometric characteristics of particles, both alone and in mixtures, are
important for product evaluation after comminution. In an actual process, a given unit does not yield a uniform product, whether
the feed is uniformly sized or not. The product normally consists of a mixture of particles, which may contain a wide variety of
sizes and even shapes. Some types of equipment are designed to control the magnitude of the largest particles in their products,
but the fine sizes are not under such control. In some machines, fines are minimized, but they cannot be totally eliminated. In
comminuted products, the term “diameter” is generally used to describe the characteristic dimension related to particle size. The
shape of an individual particle is conveniently expressed in terms of the sphericity Φ, which is independent of particle size. For
spherical particles Φ equals unity, while for many crushed materials its value lies between 0.6 and 0.7.
The term size reduction is applied to all procedures in which particles of solids are cut or broken into smaller pieces. Size
reduction of solids involves creating smaller mass unit from larger mass units of the same material. Size reduction is a mechanical
process of breakdown of solids into smaller size particles without altering the state of aggregation of solids. Many solid materials
exists/present in sizes that are too large to be used directly. Thus such material must be reduced in size before use.
13.1 Necessity of size reduction
In process industries, this operation is usually carried out in order:
a) To increase the surface area to enhance the rate of a physical or chemical process. In most of the reactions and unit operations (e.g.,
leaching) involving solid particles, the rate increases by increasing the area of contact between solid and second phase since the rate is
proportional to the area of contact between the phases involved. In leaching, the of extraction increases because of the increased area of
contact between solid and the solvent.
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CPE
General
Module- 1 Scope
and importance of
food processing....
Module- 2
Processing of farm
crops; cereals,
pulse...
Module- 3
Processing of
animal products
Module- 4 Principal
of size reduction,
grain shape...
Module- 5 Theory of
mixing, types of
mixtures for ...
Participants
Lesson 13.
Principle of Size
Reduction
Lesson- 13 Quiz
Lesson 14.
Energy and
Power
Requirement for
Size R...
Lesson 15.
Empirical laws of
Size Reduction
Lesson-14 & 15
Quiz
Lesson 16. Size
Reduction
Equipments
Lesson- 16 Quiz