A comparison of models and methods for simulating the microwave heating of moist foodstuffs
β Scribed by C.J. Budd; A.D.C. Hill
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 708 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0017-9310
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We study the problem of heating a one-dimensional approximation to a slab-sided moist foodstuff in a microwave oven, allowing for a phase change and drying. We initially investigate the accuracy of the Lambert law of exponential decay of the applied electric field into the foodstuff and derive an approximation for the field comprising the exponential decay term and an oscillatory component. We then show that the temperature of the foodstuff is given, to a good approximation, by only considering the heating effects of the exponentially decaying field. We then study the effects of drying. This process changes the dielectric properties of the material, which leads to changes in the field. However, these lead to smaller changes in the moisture content. A fast and accurate numerical method is derived which relies on smoothing the phase transition.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The finite-difference and the finite-element methods are the two most commonly used numerical methods in reservoir simulation. A comparative study of the two methods in compositional and noncompositionai simulations is presented. The comparisons are based on grid orientation effect and computational
The smoke filling process for the three types of atrium spaces commonly built in Hong Kong are simulated using the two types of deterministic fire model: zone models and field models. The zone models used are the FIRST, CFAST, and CCFM. VENTS models developed at the Building and Fire Research Labora
This work reports one-dimensional predictions of methane/air fuel combustion in inert porous media using four combustion models: full mechanism (FM, 49 species and 227 elemental reactions), skeletal mechanism (SM, 26 species and 77 elemental reactions), 4-step reduced mechanism (4RM, 9 species) and