info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo
Effect of oil content of sunflower seeds on the equilibrium moisture relationship and the safe storage condition
Fecha
2015-06Autor
Maciel, Gisele
De La Torre, Diego
Izquierdo, Natalia Gabriela
Cendoya, María Gabriela
Bartosik, Ricardo Enrique
Resumen
The adsorption and desorption equilibrium moisture content/equilibrium relative humidity relationships of
sunflower seeds with four different oil contents (35.7%, 44.6%, 48.6% and 52.7%) were obtained for temperatures of 8, 15,
25 and 35°C and moisture contents of 6.0%, 8.5%, 11.0%, 13.5%, 16.0% and 18.5%.The goodness of fit of four equilibrium
moisture content/equilibrium relative humidity models (Modified Henderson, Modified Chung-Pfost, Modified Halsey and
Modified Oswin) were evaluated for each oil content. The Modified Halsey model was the best for predicting equilibrium
moisture content/equilibrium relative humidity relationships based on the Akaike Information Criterion, the Bayesian
Information Criterion and estimated residual standard deviation. The optimized parameters for the Modified Halsey model are
presented for each oil content. Results indicate that the oil content substantially affected the equilibrium moisture
content/equilibrium relative humidity relationship. As the oil content increases, the equilibrium relative humidity also
increases for the same moisture content, meaning that to use the right set of parameters according to the oil content of the
hybrids is critical for sunflower drying, conditioning and storing. The safe storage moisture content varied from 12.0% to
7.6% for seeds with oil contents from 35.7% to 52.7%, implying that a revision of the sunflower market moisture content
might be required for safe storage of hybrids with high oil content.