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Engineering Aspects of Food Emulsification and Homogenization [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 331 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 616 g, 46 Tables, black and white; 130 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Contemporary Food Engineering
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Apr-2015
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1466580437
  • ISBN-13: 9781466580435
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 331 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 616 g, 46 Tables, black and white; 130 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Contemporary Food Engineering
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Apr-2015
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1466580437
  • ISBN-13: 9781466580435
Teised raamatud teemal:
Emulsions are found in a wide variety of food products, pharmaceuticals, paints, and cosmetics, thus emulsification is a truly multidisciplinary phenomenon. Therefore understanding of the process must evolve from the combination of (at least) three different scientific specializations. Engineering Aspects of Food Emulsification and Homogenization describes the state-of-the-art technology and brings together aspects from physical chemistry, fluid mechanics, and chemical engineering. The book explores the unit operations used in emulsification and homogenization processes, using fundamental theory from different fields to discuss design and function of different emulsification techniques.

This book summarizes the present understanding of the involved physicalchemical processes as well as specific information about the limits and possibilities for the different types of emulsifying equipment. It covers colloidal chemistry and engineering aspects of emulsification and discusses high-energy and low-energy emulsification methods. The chapters highlight low-energy emulsification processes such as membrane emulsification that are now industrially feasible. Dramatically more energy-efficient processes are being developed, and this book clarifies their present limitations, such us scale-up and achievable droplet sizes.

The present literature on emulsification is, to a large degree, influenced by the division between physical chemistry, fluid dynamics, and chemical engineering. Written by experts drawn from academia and industry, this book brings those areas together to provide a comprehensive resource that gives a deeper understanding of emulsification and homogenization in food product development.
Series Preface xi
Series Editor xiii
Preface xv
Editors xix
Contributors xxi
Synopsis xxiii
SECTION I Emulsion Fundamentals
Chapter 1 Scales and Forces in Emulsification
3(30)
Marilyn Rayner
Chapter 2 Emulsion Formation and Instability
33(18)
Bjorn Bergenstahl
Chapter 3 Formulation of Emulsions
51(50)
Marie Wahlgren
Bjorn Bergenstahl
Lars Nilsson
Marilyn Rayner
Chapter 4 Particle-Stabilized Emulsions
101(24)
Malin Sjoo
Marilyn Rayner
Marie Wahlgren
SECTION II High-Energy Processes
Chapter 5 Droplet Breakup in High-Pressure Homogenizers
125(24)
Andreas Hakansson
Chapter 6 High-Pressure Homogenizer Design
149(20)
Fredrik Innings
Chapter 7 High-Pressure Homogenization with Microstructured Systems
169(26)
Karsten Kohler
Heike Schuchmann
Chapter 8 Rotor--Stator Devices
195(14)
Karsten Kohler
Heike Schuchmann
SECTION III Low-Energy Processes
Chapter 9 MicroChannel Emulsification: Aspects of Droplet Generation, Channel Materials, Operating Conditions, and Scaling-Up Strategies
209(26)
Isao Kobayashi
Marcos A. Neves
Mitsutoshi Nakajima
Chapter 10 Emulsification with Microsieves and Other Weil-Defined Microstructured Systems
235(20)
Karin Schroen
Akmal Nazir
Chapter 11 Formation and Modification of Dispersions Using Shirasu Porous Glass Membranes
255(42)
Goran T. Vladisavljevic
Index 297
Marilyn Rayner graduated with a bachelors degree in biological engineering, with a food engineering specialization from the University of Guelph, Canada, in 1999 and earned her PhD in food engineering from Lund University in 2005 on modeling droplet formation in membrane emulsification. Dr. Rayner was awarded the Food Engineer of the Year 2005 from the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, United Kingdom, for her work on predicting the effects of pore geometry on droplet size in membrane emulsification processes. Since then, Dr. Rayner has worked in the area of multiphysics modeling, unit operation, interfacial phenomena, and particlestabilized emulsions, and is currently associate professor in food engineering at Lund University and the founder of two spin-off enterprises in the area of membrane design and particle-stabilized formulations.

Petr Dejmek, a native Czech, graduated as a process engineer from the Technical University in Aachen, Germany, and earned his PhD in food engineering at Lund University, Sweden. After 10 years with Alfa Laval companies in Sweden and Denmark, Dr. Dejmek returned to Lund University to eventually hold a research chair as professor of dairy technology, full professor of food engineering, and department head. As a visiting professor, Dr. Dejmek worked at Tokyo University, ENSIA Massy, Japanese National Food Research Institute, University of Wisconsin, and University of California, Davis. Dr. Dejmek was one of the editors of the International Dairy Journal for 10 years. He is the author of more than 100 publications on varying topics on food technology and engineering and the founder of two spin-off companies.