Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4908836 Journal of Food Engineering 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
The effect of the direction of the meat fiber on the diffusion of sodium nitrate and water in Semimembranosus pork muscle during curing was studied at different temperatures. Nitrate and water diffusion were modelled based on Fick's second law. The nitrate diffusion coefficients ranged from 0.007·10−10 to 0.034·10−10 m2/s (parallel) and 0.89·10−10 to 1.41·10−10 m2/s (perpendicular), while for water the values ranged from 9.87·10−9 to 12.46·10−9 m2/s (parallel) and 5.22·10−10 to 9.29·10−10 m2/s (perpendicular). In every case, these values increased as the temperature rose. The activation energy for water diffusion perpendicular to the meat fiber (31.86 kJ/mol) was greater than when the diffusion was parallel (15.06 kJ/mol). The opposite was observed for nitrate diffusion (96.44 kJ/mol when parallel vs. 24.71 kJ/mol when perpendicular), which implies that nitrate needs more energy for parallel diffusion and, consequently, curing is slower in that direction.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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