Journal of Food Engineering, Vol.92, No.2, 208-216, 2009
Development of an approximate empirical-CFD model estimating coupled heat and water transfers of stacked food products placed in airflow
This paper reports on the development of an approximate empirical-CFD modelling procedure combining experimental correlations for the heat and mass transfer coefficient determination and specific user-defined functions (UDF) implemented in the commercial CFD code Fluent to simulate the interrelationships at play between airflow and transfers of unwrapped food products bathing in air. Transfer modelling required specific calculation to account for water evaporation from the product surface. Mean transfer coefficients at the air-product interface were determined empirically from validated experimental correlations, where the CFD mean air velocity that is calculated in a small user-defined volume surrounding the product was incorporated. Internal water diffusion was taken into account by considering the product as a motionless fluid composed of dry matter and water. The procedure developed allows, in a single CFD calculation using a single mesh, temperature and water concentration fields to be computed and the water loss kinetics of the products to be determined together with the temperature and relative humidity fields of the air flowing around them. Although the established procedure was set up with the aim of assessing heat and water exchanges occurring in large stacks of unwrapped food products subjected to airflow, this last was validated for modelling, first, one-dimensional drying of a meat cylinder and second, three-dimensional drying of five cylindrical plaster casts placed in a row. Its application to the ripening of a row of six cheeses is also discussed. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Computational fluid dynamics (CFD);Stacked food products;Coupled heat and water transfers;User-defined function (UDF);Relative air humidity field