Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
223448 Journal of Food Engineering 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The geometry and operating conditions of a pneumatic conveying rig for infant formula were varied according to an L18 orthogonal array, with the goal of minimising variations in four product quality characteristics: bulk density, volume mean diameter, particle density and wettability. A modular pneumatic conveying rig was fabricated from 316L stainless steel components. The factors that were varied in these experiments included mode of conveying, air velocity, number of rig passes, bend radii and vertical rig section length. A factorial analysis of variance showed that the mode of conveying, air velocity and number of passes had a statistically-significant effect on bulk density. The optimum settings to minimise variability were dense phase conveying with a 50 mm plug length, 960 mm vertical section, 3 m/s air velocity, 2 passes and 50 mm bend radii, assuming a linear model. The bulk density change at these optimum settings was negligible at 0.9%.

► Investigated 4 quality characteristics: bulk density, D[4,3], particle density and wettability. ► Applied Taguchi’s experimental design approach. ► Mode of conveying, air velocity and number of passes had a significant effect on bulk density. ► Air velocity was significant for only dilute phase conveying, and not for dense phase.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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