How to Preserve Food with a Solar Dryer
From Howtopedia - english
Contents |
Solar Drying - Technical Brief
Short Description
- Problem:
- Idea:
- Difficulty:
- Price Range:
- Material Needeed:
- Geographic Area:
- Competencies:
- How Many people?
- How Long does it take?
Introduction
Agricultural and other products have been dried by the sun and wind in the open air for thousands of years. The purpose is either to preserve them for later use, as is the case with food; or as an integral part of the production process, as with timber, tobacco and laundering. In industrialised regions and sectors, open air-drying has now been largely replaced by mechanised dryers, with boilers to heat incoming air, and fans to force it through at a high rate. Mechanised drying is faster than open-air drying, uses much less land and usually gives a better quality product. But the equipment is expensive and requires substantial quantities of fuel or electricity to operate.
'Solar drying' in the context of this technical brief, refers to methods of using the sun's energy for drying, but excludes open air 'sun drying'. The justification for solar dryers is that they may be more effective than sun drying, but have lower operating costs than mechanised dryers. A number of designs are proven technically and while none are yet in widespread use, there is still optimism about their potential.
How solar dryers work
One well-known type of solar dryer is shown in Figure 1. It was designed for the particular requirements of rice but the principles hold for other products and design types, since the basic need to remove water is the same.
Air is drawn through the dryer by natural convection. It is heated as it passes through the collector and then partially cooled as it picks up moisture from the rice. The rice is heated both by the air and directly by the sun.
Warm air can hold more moisture than cold air so the amount required depends on the temperature to which it is heated in the collector as well as the amount held (absolute humidity) when it entered the collector.
|
Initial relative humidity |
Moisture absorption capability (grammes of water/m° of air) | ||
|
Not heated |
Heated to 40°C |
Heated to 60°C | |
|
40% |
4.3g/m° |
9.2g/m° |
16.3g/m° |
|
60% |
1.4g/m° |
8.2g/m° |
15.6g/m° |
|
80% |
7.1g/m° |
14.9g/m° | |
Table 1: The drying process
|
Initial relative humidity |
Density of the air (kg/m3) (Drop in density, in brackets) | |||
|
Not heated |
Heated to | |||
|
30 °C |
40 °C |
60 °C | ||
|
40% |
Ambient 1.19 |
1.19 |
1.19 |
1.19 |
|
Below bed 1.19 (.00) |
1.15 (.04) |
1.12 (.07) |
1.05 (.14) | |
|
Above bed 1.21 (-.02) |
1.19 (.00) |
1.17 (.02) |
1.14 (.05) | |
|
60% |
Ambient 1.19 |
1.19 |
1.19 |
1.19 |
|
Below bed 1.19 (.00) |
1.15 (.04) |
1.11 (.08) |
1.05 (.14) | |
|
Above bed 1.20 (-.01) |
1.18 (.01) |
1.16 (.03) |
1.13 (.06) | |
|
80% |
Ambient 1.18 |
1.18 |
1.18 |
1.18 |
|
Below bed 1.18 (.00) |
1.14 (.04) |
1.11 (.07) |
1.04 (.14) | |
|
Above bed 1.18 (.00) |
1.16 (.02) |
1.15 (.03) |
1.11 (.07) | |
Table 2: Air density variation in a natural convection dryer
Forced convection solar dryer
(Figure 2)
By using a fan to create the airflow, drying time can be reduced by a factor of 3. Also, the area of collector required is reduced by up to 50%. Therefore, the area of collector required for a given throughput of product could be reduced by a factor of 5-6. The initial cost of a one tonne per day dryer is in the region of £1500-2000. The fan would consume about 500 watts for 6 hours, and so electricity cost (at 0.07/kWhr) would be about 0.20 per tonne of rice dried
Solar drying or open-air drying?
The great advantage of open-air drying is that it has little or no equipment costs. It is labour-intensive but this may not involve much economic cost in rural areas in developing countries. It requires about three times as much land (100m2 per tonne of rice) compared to solar drying, but this may not matter too much in many cases.
Firstly, one important advantage of solar drying is that the product is protected from rain, insects, animals and dust that may contain faecal material. Some systems also give protection from direct sunlight. Second, faster drying reduces the likelihood of mould growth. Third, higher drying temperatures mean that more complete drying is possible, and this may allow much longer storage times (but only if rehumidification is prevented in storage). Finally, more complex types of solar dryers allow some control over drying rates.
Solar dryers or fuelled dryers?
The choice between using solar radiation or fuel, to heat the air is mainly one between a higher initial cost and continuing fuel costs which needs to be analysed for each location.
In some circumstances, it may be possible to burn rice husks or other fuel with low opportunity cost. One tonne of rice gives 200kg of husks.
Fuel heating usually allows better control of the drying-rate than solar heating; it also enables drying to be continuous. If either of these is required, a combined system may be appropriate with pre-heating of air by solar energy.
Which solar dryer?
The choice between alternative types of solar dryer will depend on local requirements and in particular on the scale of operation. If intended for peasant farmers then initial capital cost may be the main constraint and plastic-covered tent or box dryers may be appropriate.
There may however be a trend towards more centralised drying to enable more intensive usage of the equipment. The greater initial cost of glass covers may then be affordable, and grid electricity may be available to run fans and obtain much faster throughput for a given collector area.
For intermediate scale and capital cost the natural convection rice dryer is a well proven design.
References and further reading
This Howtopedia entry was derived from the Practical Action Technical Brief Solar Drying.
To look at the original document follow this link:
http://www.practicalaction.org/?id=technical_briefs_food_processing
A survey of solar agricultural driers - Brace Research Institute - 1975
Preparing grain for storage - Action/Peace Corps and VITA - 1976
Solar driers - Commonwealth Science Council - 1985
Solar drying - Practical methods of food preservation - ILO 1988
Producing Solar Dried Fruit and Vegetables for Small-scale Enterprise Development - NRI 1996
Try Drying It!: Case studies in the dissemination of tray drying technology - IT Publishing 1991
Usefull addresses
Practical Action
The Schumacher Centre for Technology & Development, Bourton on Dunsmore, RUGBY, CV23 9QZ, United Kingdom.
Tel.: +44 (0) 1926 634400, Fax: +44 (0) 1926 634401
Email: practicalaction@practicalaction.org.uk web:http://www.practicalaction.org

NR International
Central Avenue Chatham Maritime, Kent, ME4 4TB, United Kingdom
Tel: +44 1634 880088, Fax: +44 1634 880066/77
Website: http://www.nrinternational.co.uk/



