Instrumentation and Computer Control in Food Processing Industry
Instrumentation and Computer Control in Food Processing Industry
Instrumentation and Computer Control in Food Processing Industry
15EI609-TECHNICAL SEMINAR II
Submitted by
AUDITHAN S B (171EI112)
SATHYAMANGALAM-638401
APRIL 2020
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BONAFIDE CERTIFICATE
SIGNATURE SIGNATURE
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
ABSTRACT
Food processing plays a major role in our day today life. In United States
approximately one-seventh of the total sales volume is dedicated to food
production. The growth rate of food production is three times than that of the
population growth rate. This dissimilarity leads to the industrial expansion
which also leads to increase in cost. A decline in earnings has existed
traditionally in food processing industries. But our motive is to increase the food
production rate at lower cost by introducing new advanced techniques. It has
been found that instrumentation and computer control are the major tools that
can be installed in food processors to increase food production at minimal cost.
Moreover they have proven to be the cost reduction techniques. The applications
that have been installed in food processors are: i. energy conservation computer
control, ii. Food preparation and cooking computer control, iii. Food moisture,
drying and dehydration computer control. The factors influencing
instrumentation and computer control are increase in labour productivity,
equipment productivity, reduce in energy usage, cost per ton of production,
rejection rates per ton of production, higher production value, sales volume,
reduction of interest rates.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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ABSTRACT iv
LIST OF FIGURES vi
1 INTRODUCTION 1
2 LITERATURE REVIEW 2
3 METHODOLOGY 3
3.1 ENERGY CONSERVATION 3
COMPUTER CONTROL IN FOOD
PROCESSING PLANTS
3.2 FOOD PREPARATION AND COOKING 5
COMPUTER CONTROL
3.2.1 FOOD PREPARATION 5
3.2.2 FOOD COOKING 6
3.3 FOOD MOISTURE, DRYING AND 7
DEHYDRATION COMPUTER CONTROL
4 EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION 9
5 CONCLUSION 10
REFERENCES 11
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LIST OF FIGURES
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CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Instrumentation and computer control are the major tools for improving
productivity at minimal costs in food processing industries. The measurement of
flow, level, pressure, temperature, speed, moisture and color are necessary for
computerized food processing control. The conventional instruments like
mixing tank levels, storage bin levels, holding tank levels, cooking stage
temperatures, drying stage temperatures, conveyor belt speeds, mixing screw
speeds, gas pressures, fuel pressures, water flows, and mixture flows. The
computer control systems have been interfaced to food processing laboratory
and the test data are fed through manual or direct entry. The test data includes
the measurement of variables like solids contents, sugar contents, insolubles,
flavour and sulphide concentration of food. It helps in on-line measurements
and this has been enhanced by the use of computers to support sensor elements
with computation algorithms. Moisture measurement plays a major role in food
processing. The calibration of moisture is influenced by factors like temperature
and material composition. The computerized measurements has many
advantages like easy implementation of mathematical models, compensation
from sensors are economical.
CHAPTER 2
LITERATURE REVIEW
V. Vijayaragavan et al. published a paper on “pH automation in sugar
industries”. In sugar production, pH neutralization is most important to
enhance the edibility of sugar. To control pH in order to enhance edibility of
sugar using the flow of MOL and surface fitting methodology was opted in
this paper.
T. Gayathri Devi et al. published a paper on “Machine vision based
quality analysis of rice grains”. In machine vision based testing, we take both
physical (grain shape and size) and chemical characteristics (amylose
content, gel consistency) for evaluation and grading of rice grains.
R. Davies et al. published a paper on “VIP3D-an application of image
processing technology for quality control in food industry”. This paper
focuses on the problems encountered and the machine vision solutions
developed, to obtain accurate 3-D measurements of the different types and
sizes of loaves produced.
M. Saliba et al. published a paper on “Instrumentation issues in the
handling of fish for automated processing”. In this system, a fish on a
moving conveyor is imaged by a charge coupled device (CCD) camera. The
image is processed for feature recognition and a v-cut is performed for the
head-removal operation.
Pierre Payeur et al. published a paper on “Automated tuning of a vision-
based inspection system for industrial food manufacturing”. This research
integrates machine learning techniques in the process to automate the initial
tuning of real-time vision-based inspection systems for bakery products.
CHAPTER 3
METHODOLOGY
Instrumentation and computer control has been installed in various
applications like i. energy conservation computer control, ii. Food preparation
and cooking computer control, iii. Food moisture, drying and dehydration
computer control. The above methods will give higher rate of food production at
minimal cost of industrial expansion.
3.1Energy Conservation Computer Control in Food Processing
Plants
It can be achieved by boiler pressure and steam control, burner fuel
and combustion control, fuel consumption recording and coordination control
heat and power demand controls. The boiler pressure and steam control provides
control of master steam control, firing rate control, master boiler control, feed
water and drum level control. The boiler must follow the plant in its demand for
steam.
Fig 3.4 Manual control leaves this process temperature off-specification for
more than 15 min
Fig 3.5 Computer control leaves the same process temperature (off-specification
for less than 2 min)
CHAPTER 4
EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION
In the analysis of vegetable drying process, the vegetables are fed after
washing and slicing to a series of drying stages labelled as A-, B-, C-, and D-
stages. The incoming material has a moisture of 80 percent which undergoes
moisture changes during processing. The material reaches the final storage at a
moisture level of 4 percent. High performance control of the vegetable
temperature is needed after each drying stage. The advantages of this control are
the ability to raise the final moisture level after the D-stage, and to raise the
drying rate in all of the stages. The ability to raise the drying rate derives from
two factors. One is that accurate temperature control allows the maintenance of
higher average temperatures after a stage since the risk of excursions into a
domain where unacceptable colour change would occur has been reduced
compared with manual control. The other factor is better balance between
drying stages.
REFERENCES
1. Baker, K. E., "Computer Control of a Sugar Refinery,"1st Annual
Instrument Society of America Food and Beverage Instrumentation
Symposium, Montreal, Canada, June 7, 1972.
2. Reed, V. W., "Computer Process Control: It's the New Thing," 1st Annual
Instrument Society of American Food and Beverage Instrumentation
Symposium, Montreal, Canada, June 7, 1972.
3. Timbers, G. E„ "Measurement of Moisture in Foods," 2nd Annual
Instrument Society of American Food and Beverage Instrumentation
Symposium, Montreal, Canada, June 4, 1973.
4. Delavier, H. J., "Fuel Savings in a Consistent Heat Economy of a Beet
Sugar Factory," 18th General Meeting of the American Society of Beet
Sugar Technologists, Feb. 24, 1974.
5. Kohn, A. R., "Computer Rides Herd on Big Milk Processor, “Food
Engineering, A Chilton Publication, Randor, Pa Apr. 1974.
6. Hodson, R. W., "Computers Pay Off in Food Process Control, “Food
Engineering, A Chilton Publication, Randor, Pa June 1974.
7. "Why Food Processors are Starving for Profits," Business Week,
editorial, Dec. 1, 1973.
8. Takahashi, Y., Rabins, M. J., and Auslander, D. M.,"Control and
Dynamic Systems," Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass., 1970.
9. Cooper, H. R., "What We Can Expect From Process Control in the Food
Industry," Food Processing Symposium, Endicott, N. Y., Dec. 9, 1963.
10.National Canners Association, "Proposed Process Control Plan," Federal
Register, Nov. 12, 1971.
11."Official Standards and Methods for Dehydrated Onion and Garlic
Products," American Dehydrated Onion and Garlic Association ADOGA,
San Francisco, Calif., Feb. 1, 1974.