Lyophilization

Add to my library

F3240 V1 Article

Lyophilization

Authors : Michèle MARIN, Frédéric RENÉ

Publication date: March 10, 2000 | Lire en français

Add to my library Add to my library

Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur You do not have access to this resource.
Request your free trial access! Free trial

Already subscribed?

Overview

Read this article from a comprehensive knowledge base, updated and supplemented with articles reviewed by scientific committees.

Read the article

AUTHORS

  • Michèle MARIN : Professor at the Institut national agronomique Paris-Grignon (INA PG)

  • Frédéric RENÉ : Head of Technological and Process Innovation, Groupe DANONE

 INTRODUCTION

Freeze-drying, formerly known as cryodessication, is a low-temperature dehydration process which eliminates most of the water contained in a product by sublimation. It enables long-term preservation by lowering the product's water activity.

Because of its specific features, freeze-drying occupies a unique position among drying techniques. It produces high-quality end products. The shape and appearance of the products are well preserved, and their aromatic quality is far superior to that of dried products. The transition of the product from the frozen to the dehydrated state, in the absence of a high proportion of liquid water, reduces the potential for the development of spoilage reactions. Another major technological advantage of freeze-drying is the ability of the freeze-dried product to rehydrate instantly.

On the other hand, the development of freeze-drying in the food industry is limited by its cost, which remains much lower than that of drying. The low productivity of freeze-drying is due to the vacuum mode of operation, which is usually discontinuous, resulting in long processing times (from ten hours to several days). Investment and operating costs are also high (energy consumption of 1,500 to 2,500 kWh per tonne of water to be eliminated).

As a result, freeze-drying can only be applied to products with high added value. In the food industry, these include coffee, herbs and spices, ready-made meals, and ingredients (vegetables, fruit, seafood, etc.) for instant dehydrated soups, culinary preparations and breakfast cereals. The pharmaceutical (vaccines, serum, medicines) and bio-industry (sourdoughs) sectors are much more strongly concerned by the freeze-drying process, which alone enables them to obtain the technique's most characteristic property, i.e. the preservation of an active principle (biological and/or medicinal activity) in a product to be stored at near-ambient temperature.

You do not have access to this resource.
Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur

Exclusive to subscribers. 97% yet to be discovered!

You do not have access to this resource. Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed?


Ongoing reading
Lyophilization

Article included in this offer

"Food industry"

( 270 articles )

Complete knowledge base

Updated and enriched with articles validated by our scientific committees

Services

A set of exclusive tools to complement the resources

View offer details

Dans les ressources documentaires

Swell-drying : séchage et texturation par DIC des végétaux

Dans de nombreuses opérations de séchage de milieux poreux (produits biologiques), la structure naturelle...

Séchage des produits alimentaires - Principes

Le séchage est une technique de préservation des produits alimentaires, qui intervient dans un grand nomb...

Modifications biochimiques des constituants alimentaires

Les progrès de notre alimentation ont suivi ceux de la chimie et de la biologie ; les premiers pionniers ...

Tous les livres blancs
Article Le meilleur de la tech #7
31 May 2021
Le meilleur de la tech #7

Quoi de neuf dans le domaine de l\'innovation ce mois-ci ? Un matériau de construction tiré de zestes ; des cristaux détectent les fuites ; un nouvel aérogel da...

Toutes les actualités
Contact us