| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1712432 | Biosystems Engineering | 2007 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
A method was developed for the automatic endpoint determination of near-ambient barley drying in static deep beds, based on a correlation to infer grain moisture content of the top layer, using a continuous on-line measurement of relative humidity and temperature of outlet air. The correlation was based on an equilibrium isotherm equation, modified by an empirical constant accounting for the non-equilibrium nature of drying. The modifying constant was fitted using results from nine laboratory experiments and validated in an on-farm drying experiment. Three desorption isotherm equations, specific for barley, were investigated: modified Henderson, Chung and Chung-Pfost equations. The correlation relationship developed from the Chung-Pfost isotherm equation and modified by the authors by the addition of a constant of 0.0213 kg kgâ1 d.b. predicted moisture content in a 2-m-thick fixed-bed of malting barley cv. Annabell during the final phase of drying better than the other equations (in a climate that is the mixture of maritime and continental climates). The estimated accuracy of the proposed method is sufficient for practical applications with the post-harvest conservation of barley.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Control and Systems Engineering
Authors
A. Ryniecki, M. Gawrysiak-Witulska, J. Wawrzyniak,
