Multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting

The coffee industry relies on fundamental research to improve the techniques and processes related to its products. However, the exploitation of mathematical models that provide insight into improving the roasting of coffee beans has been largely unexplored. In this thesis, we develop mathematical m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fadai, Nabil
Other Authors: Van Gorder, Robert ; Please, Colin
Published: University of Oxford 2018
Subjects:
510
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757812
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7578122019-03-05T15:13:25ZMultiphase modelling of coffee bean roastingFadai, NabilVan Gorder, Robert ; Please, Colin2018The coffee industry relies on fundamental research to improve the techniques and processes related to its products. However, the exploitation of mathematical models that provide insight into improving the roasting of coffee beans has been largely unexplored. In this thesis, we develop mathematical models to understand specific processes in a roasting coffee bean that are crucial in flavour development and consistency. We explore these processes using several models in a multiphase framework to highlight how phase changes, gas pressures, and various chemical reactions occur in different parts of the bean. These new models are then compared to new and existing experimental data, where the merits and pitfalls of each model are then discussed. One main phenomenon that is crucial to the roasting process is the evaporation of water. Various models of evaporation rates are proposed and incorporated into the multiphase models, where the resulting qualitative features of the behaviour are discussed. The behaviour of these multiphase models is studied using asymptotic analysis and the leading-order water and vapour transport predicted from this analysis faithfully reproduce the salient features of the model. We also examine how deformations and material stresses occur during the roasting process. We model the cellulose structure of a coffee bean as a poroviscoelastic material and couple the resulting constitutive equations with aforementioned multiphase models. The qualitative behaviour of this coupled model is discussed for various parameter regimes and used to explain various physical phenomena observed during the roasting process. A summary of key findings is then presented.510University of Oxfordhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757812http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:20a9d08c-e675-4907-8425-6653a4753587Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 510
spellingShingle 510
Fadai, Nabil
Multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting
description The coffee industry relies on fundamental research to improve the techniques and processes related to its products. However, the exploitation of mathematical models that provide insight into improving the roasting of coffee beans has been largely unexplored. In this thesis, we develop mathematical models to understand specific processes in a roasting coffee bean that are crucial in flavour development and consistency. We explore these processes using several models in a multiphase framework to highlight how phase changes, gas pressures, and various chemical reactions occur in different parts of the bean. These new models are then compared to new and existing experimental data, where the merits and pitfalls of each model are then discussed. One main phenomenon that is crucial to the roasting process is the evaporation of water. Various models of evaporation rates are proposed and incorporated into the multiphase models, where the resulting qualitative features of the behaviour are discussed. The behaviour of these multiphase models is studied using asymptotic analysis and the leading-order water and vapour transport predicted from this analysis faithfully reproduce the salient features of the model. We also examine how deformations and material stresses occur during the roasting process. We model the cellulose structure of a coffee bean as a poroviscoelastic material and couple the resulting constitutive equations with aforementioned multiphase models. The qualitative behaviour of this coupled model is discussed for various parameter regimes and used to explain various physical phenomena observed during the roasting process. A summary of key findings is then presented.
author2 Van Gorder, Robert ; Please, Colin
author_facet Van Gorder, Robert ; Please, Colin
Fadai, Nabil
author Fadai, Nabil
author_sort Fadai, Nabil
title Multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting
title_short Multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting
title_full Multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting
title_fullStr Multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting
title_full_unstemmed Multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting
title_sort multiphase modelling of coffee bean roasting
publisher University of Oxford
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757812
work_keys_str_mv AT fadainabil multiphasemodellingofcoffeebeanroasting
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