Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
Spray drying consists in transformation of a liquid concentrate into a dry powder. The concentrate is atomized inside a drying chamber where the droplets come into contact with a flow of hot and dry air. Because of the large surface area created by the atomization and high heat and mass transfer coefficients, the evaporation can be achieved almost instantaneously at temperatures lower than the boiling point of the solvent. Hence, the spray drying operation is a technique of choice for drying of heat-sensitive materials. This article deals with the basic principles of atomization and drying.
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Read the articleAUTHORS
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François GOMEZ: Senior Lecturer - Compiègne University of Technology Process Engineering Department
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Khashayar SALEH: University Professor - Compiègne University of Technology Process Engineering Department
INTRODUCTION
Obtaining solid products from a spray-drying process has been known since the 19th century. Initially used to dry eggs and concentrate juices, the process developed significantly in the 1920s in the dairy and detergent industries. Thanks to its great flexibility, it is now applied to a wide range of products in the agro-industrial, pharmaceutical and cosmetics sectors, as well as for the preparation of pigments and mineral fillers.
Spray-drying consists in obtaining a divided solid by bringing a hot gas into contact with a fluid dispersed in the form of fine droplets. By adjusting the operating parameters, it is possible to control various properties of the finished product, such as the size and shape of the solid particles, or its solubility via the presence of porosity.
In this first dossier [J 2 256], we present the fundamental principles on which spray drying is based. These concern spray formation and characterization, followed by the thermodynamic aspect with mass and heat balances and, finally, the kinetic aspect with droplet drying and the concepts associated with sizing spray-drying devices.
In a second dossier
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KEYWORDS
Atomization | Pulvérization | Spray | Powder | Drying
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