The objective of this work was to determine how various types of tea dryer would perform with di!erent levels of inputs. Three dryer types were commonly found in practice, two others are not generally used and one type is unknown in practice. Simulation models for each type were constructed from a t
PH—Postharvest Technology: Automatic Endpoint Determination for Batch Tea Dryers
✍ Scribed by S.J. Temple; A.J.B. van Boxtel
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 156 KB
- Volume
- 78
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8634
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✦ Synopsis
A laboratory batch #uid-bed dryer was developed for handling small samples of tea for experimental batch manufacture, and this dryer required a means of stopping drying when the process was complete. A control system was devised which requires only the initial weight of the sample to be entered into the controller. The system then takes full control, using only an inlet and exhaust temperature measurement. A simulation model was used to explore the operating region of the dryer, and how the various disturbances a!ected the drying time. A relationship was found between time to a transition temperature and time to completion which enabled a simple algorithm to be developed, suitable for implementation on a microcontroller. The method was found to be substantially independent of variables such as sample moisture content and ambient air conditions, as well as inlet temperature, over the range normally experienced. The algorithm was tested in practice and found to give adequate control, substantially better than the manual system used previously.
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