The principal
purpose of instantizing is to improve the rate and completeness of reconstitutability
of dried milk. During the spray drying process, the aim is to produce particles
with a big surface/mass ratio, i.e., small particles. The reconstitution of small
particles of powder in water is, however, difficult and requires intensive
mixing for their dispersion. One of the major objectives of new innovations in
the area of spray and fluid bed drying is to produce instant powders by
effecting agglomeration.Agglomeration means getting smaller particles to adhere
to each other to form a powder consisting of bigger conglomerates/agglomerates,
which are essential for improving certain reconstitutional properties of
powders such as wettability, sinkability, dispersibility, although the net
solubility does not improve. The agglomerates in the size range of
100-150 microns are recovered as final product.
The production of
instantized whole milk powder was not successful until 1970s.The presence of
free fat hindered the easy wetting of the powder particles. This problem was
overcome and instant properties were achieved by treating the agglomerated
powder with lecithin.
Major systems of
instantization of milk powders are Peeble process, Cherry-Burrel process,
Blow-Knox process and Niro agglomerator. Each varies in equipment and details.
The general features in common are:Wetting of the surface of
powder particles with steam, atomized water or a mixture of both.Agglomeration whereby the
particles collide due to turbulence and adhere to each other forming clusters.Redrying with hot air Cooling and sizing to
eliminate the very small particles and very large agglomerates.
i)
Peebles process: The powder pneumatically enters the agglomeration chamber. The
particles are wetted to 10-15% moisture in the turbulent air-stream zone and
form agglomerates. These fall into the next zone or chamber which re-dries them
by means of filtered air at 110-121oC.
The product is cooled,
sized with rollers, screened and packaged. The fine particles are returned to
be recycled through the agglomeration process.
ii)
Cherry-Burrel process: This process consists of delivering
dried milk at a uniform rate by air, screw or vibrator to a horizontal tube.
Wetting and agglomeration takes place in the most rapidly moving air-product mixture,
which passes into the cyclone. During wetting, the moisture of milk powder
increases to 6-8%. Air returns from the top of the cyclone to recycle and the clusters
drop into a filtered hot-air stream at 132-149oC.
The product, while moving into the second cyclone, is dried by this air. The
air is exhausted from the top of the cyclone and the product clusters descend
into a horizontal shaker through which cooling reduces the temperature from
71-82oC to 37-38oC. The sifter removes the fine particles. The clusters pass
through sizing rolls and are sifted and packaged.
iii)
Blow-Knox process: Dried milk is measured by a rotary-feed valve into a line and
fed pneumatically into a small agglomerate tube. An alternative system uses a
vibrating trough to control product entry into the agglomerating tube. Steam
wets the particles to about 7% moisture as they fall between two jets. Ambient
air entering through radial slots in the agglomerating tube maintains the
turbulence necessary for the formation of aggregates. The agglomerated product
drops onto a conveyer belt for conditioning and transport to deck-type
vibrating re-driers. Dried agglomerates are screened after they pass between
sizing rolls. Fine particles are reprocessed through the system.
iv)
Niro/Anhydro agglomerator: It is an attachment fixed to the
bottom of the vertical-type drying chamber. Milk is dried to about 9% moisture content
in the drying chamber. A vibrator transports the product from the drier to the
inlet of the Niro agglomerator that consists of three sections.In the first
section, agglomeration takes place; in the second section, redrying with hot
air; and in the third, the product is cooled to room temperature. Very fine
mesh screens convey the product through the three sections. Air that passes up
through the screens goes out carrying the fine particles from the top of the
agglomerator. Fine particles are returned to the drying chamber.
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