Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1806735 | Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2012 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D)-SE, 2D-GE and tri-dimensional (3D)-GE two-point T1-weighted MRI methods were evaluated in this study in order to maximize the accuracy of temperature mapping of bread dough during thermal processing. Uncertainties were propagated throughout each protocol of measurement, and comparisons demonstrated that all the methods with comparable acquisition times minimized the temperature uncertainty to similar extent. The experimental uncertainties obtained with low-field MRI were also compared to the theoretical estimations. Some discrepancies were reported between experimental and theoretical values of uncertainties of temperature; however, experimental and theoretical trends with varying parameters agreed to a large extent for both SE and GE methods. The 2D-SE method was chosen for further applications on prefermented dough because of its lower sensitivity to susceptibility differences in porous media. It was applied for temperature mapping in prefermented dough during chilling prior to freezing and compared locally to optical fiber measurements.
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Authors
Tiphaine Lucas, Maja Musse, Mélanie Bornert, Armel Davenel, Stéphane Quellec,