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Freeze-Drying
What Is
Lyophilization or Freeze-Dried Food?
by Mary Bellis
The basic process of freeze-drying food was known to the ancient
Peruvian Incas of the Andes.
Freeze-drying, or lyophilization, is the sublimation (removal)
of water content from frozen food.
The dehydration occurs under a vacuum and causes the plant or
animal product solidly frozen during the process.
Shrinkage is eliminated or minimized, and a near-perfect
preservation results.
Freeze-dried food lasts longer than other preserved food and is
very light, which makes it perfect for space travel.
The Incas stored their potatoes and other food crops on the
mountain heights above Machu Picchu.
The cold mountain temperatures froze the food and the water
inside slowly vaporized under the low air pressure of the high altitudes.
During World War II,
the freeze-dried process was developed commercially when it was used to
preserve blood plasma and penicillin.
Freeze-drying requires the use of a special machine called a
freeze dryer, which has a large chamber for freezing and a vacuum pump for
removing moisture.
Over 400 different types of freeze-dried foods have been
commercially produced since the 1960s.
Two bad candidates for freeze-drying are lettuce and watermelon
because the water content is too high and they freeze-dry poorly.
Freeze-dried coffee is the best-known freeze-dried product.
The Freeze Dryer
Special thanks goes to Thomas A. Jennings, Ph.D., author of the reply to the question "Who invented
the first freeze-dryer?"
Thomas A. Jennings, "Lyophilization: Introduction and
Basic Principles"
"There is no real invention of a
freeze-dryer. It appears to have evolved with time from a laboratory instrument
that was referred to by Benedict and Manning (1905) as a 'chemical pump.'
“Shackell took the basic design of Benedict
and Manning and used an electrically driven vacuum pump instead of the
displacement of the air with ethyl ether to
produce the necessary vacuum.
“It was Shackell who first realized that the
material had to be frozen before commencing the drying
process — hence freeze-drying.
“The literature does not readily reveal the
person who first called the equipment used to conduct this form of drying a
'freeze-dryer.'"
Dr. Jennings' company has developed a number of instruments that
are directly applicable to the lyophilization process, including their patented
D2 and DTA thermal analysis instrument.
Trivia
Freeze-dried coffee was
first produced in 1938, and lead to the development of powdered food products.
Nestle company invented freeze-dried coffee after being asked by
Brazil to help find a solution to their coffee surpluses.
Nestle's own freeze-dried coffee product was called Nescafe and
was first introduced in Switzerland.
Tasters Choice Coffee, another very famous freeze-dried
manufactured product, derives from a patent issued to James Mercer.
From 1966 to 1971, Mercer was chief development engineer for
Hills Brothers Coffee Inc., in San Francisco.
During this five-year period, he was responsible for developing
a continuous freeze-drying capability for Hills Brothers, for which he was
granted 47 U.S. and foreign patents.
How Does Freeze Drying Work?
According to Oregon Freeze
Dry, the purpose of freeze-drying is to remove a solvent (usually
water) from dissolved or dispersed solids.
Freeze drying is the method for preserving materials that
are unstable in solution.
In addition, freeze-drying can be used to separate and recover
volatile substances as well as to purify materials. The fundamental process
steps are:
1. Freezing:
The product is frozen. This provides a necessary condition for low-temperature
drying.
2. Vacuum:
After freezing, the product is placed under a vacuum. This enables the frozen
solvent in the product to vaporize without passing through the liquid phase, a
process known as sublimation.
3. Heat:
Heat is applied to the frozen product to accelerate sublimation.
4. Condensation:
Low-temperature condenser plates remove the vaporized solvent from the vacuum
chamber by converting it back to a solid. This completes the separation
process.
Applications of Freeze-Dried Fruits
In freeze-drying, moisture sublimes directly from the solid
state to vapor, thus producing a product with controllable moisture that has no
need for cooking or refrigeration and retains its natural flavor and
color.
Mary
Bellis
Introduction
New
York-based film producer and director
Singled
out by Forbes magazine for her writing on inventors.
Known
in art and independent film circles by the name CalmX
Creator
of computer-generated art
Experience
Mary
Bellis was a former writer for ThoughtCo, where she covered inventors for 18
years. She was a freelance writer, film producer, and director. In
addition, Forbes Best of the Web credited her for creating the number one
online destination for information about inventors and inventions. Her
writing has been reprinted and referenced in numerous educational books and
articles. She was known for her short independent films and
documentaries, including one on Alexander Graham Bell. She specialized in
making and exhibiting computer-generated art, while working as an animator,
journalist and an independent video game developer. She died on March 28,
2015.
Education
Mary
Bellis held a Master of Fine Arts in film and animation from the San
Francisco Art Institute.
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