Journal of Food Engineering, Vol.49, No.4, 291-295, 2001
Impingement drying of foods using hot air and superheated steam
Impingement drying is an old technology that has only recently been applied to food products. Tortilla and potato chips, pizza crust, pretzels, crackers, and cooks, for example, have been successfully cooked and baked in air-impingement ovens in the Food industry. Granular products (coffee beans, cocoa beans, rice, nuts) dry faster and more uniformly when using impingement dryers due to the pseudofluidized bed created by the high-velocity air from the nozzles. Tortilla chips and potato chips have been impingement dried using hot air and superheated steam. At higher air temperatures (above 130 degreesC), tortilla chips dry faster when using superheated steam compared to hot air (at the same conditions). Impingement drying with superheated steam can produce potato chips with less color deterioration and less nutritional losses (Vitamin-C) than drying with hot air. Potato chips dry faster at high superheated steam temperature and high convective heat transfer coefficients.