ABSTRACT

As the complexity of the food supply system increases, the focus on processes used to convert raw food materials and ingredients into consumer food products becomes more important. The Handbook of Food Engineering, Third Edition, continues to provide students and food engineering professionals with the latest information needed to improve the efficiency of the food supply system.

As with the previous editions, this book contains the latest information on the thermophysical properties of foods and kinetic constants needed to estimate changes in key components of foods during manufacturing and distribution. Illustrations are used to demonstrate the applications of the information to process design. Researchers should be able to use the information to pursue new directions in process development and design, and to identify future directions for research on the physical properties of foods and kinetics of changes in the food throughout the supply system.

Features

  • Covers basic concepts of transport and storage of liquids and solids, heating and cooling of foods, and food ingredients

  • New chapter covers nanoscale science in food systems

  • Includes chapters on mass transfer in foods and membrane processes for liquid concentration and other applications

  • Discusses specific unit operations on freezing, concentration, dehydration, thermal processing, and extrusion

The first four chapters of the Third Edition focus primarily on the properties of foods and food ingredients with a new chapter on nanoscale applications in foods. Each of the eleven chapters that follow has a focus on one of the more traditional unit operations used throughout the food supply system. Major revisions and/or updates have been incorporated into chapters on heating and cooling processes, membrane processes, extrusion processes, and cleaning operations.

chapter Chapter 1|152 pages

Linear and Non-Linear Rheological Properties of Foods

ByOzlem C. Duvarci, Gamze Yazar, Hulya Dogan, Jozef L. Kokini

chapter Chapter 2|72 pages

Advances in Nanotechnology of Food Materials for Food and Non-Food Applications

ByRohollah Sadeghi, Thanida Chuacharoen, Cristina M. Sabliov, Carmen I. Moraru, Mahsan Karimi, Jozef L. Kokini

chapter Chapter 3|260 pages

Reaction Kinetics in Food Systems

ByRicardo Villota, James G. Hawkes

chapter Chapter 4|66 pages

Phase and State Transitions and Transformations in Food Systems

ByYrjö H. Roos

chapter Chapter 5|46 pages

Transport and Storage of Food Products

ByM. A. Rao

chapter Chapter 6|70 pages

Heating and Cooling Processes for Foods

ByR. Paul. Singh, Gail Bornhorst

chapter Chapter 7|46 pages

Food Freezing and Frozen Food Storage

ByDennis R. Heldman

chapter Chapter 8|22 pages

Mass Transfer in Foods

ByBengt Hallström, Vassilis Gekas, Ingegerd Sjöholm, Anne Marie Romulus

chapter Chapter 9|60 pages

Evaporation and Freeze Concentration

ByKen R. Morison, Richard W. Hartel

chapter Chapter 10|34 pages

Membranes in Food Technology

ByFrank Lipnizki

chapter Chapter 11|152 pages

Food Dehydration

ByMartin R. Okos, Osvaldo Campanella, Ganesan Narsimhan, Rakesh K. Singh, A. C. Weitnauer

chapter Chapter 12|34 pages

Thermal Processing of Canned Foods

ByArthur Teixeira

chapter Chapter 13|46 pages

Extrusion Processes

ByLeon Levine, Robert C. Miller

chapter Chapter 14|94 pages

Food Packaging

ByJohn M. Krochta

chapter Chapter 15|50 pages

Engineering Considerations for Cleaning and Disinfection in the Food Industry

ByKylee R. Goode, David Phinney, Tony Hasting, Peter Fryer