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Fakhreddin Salehi

Fakhreddin Salehi

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID: 0000-0002-6653-860X
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 50262947600
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Food Industry, Bahar
Address: Department of Food Science and Technology, Faculty of Food Industry, Bu-Ali Sina University, Hamedan, Iran
Phone:

Research

Title
Optimization of sonication time, edible coating concentration, and osmotic solution °Brix for the dehydration process of quince slices using response surface methodology
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Color indexes, Guar gum, Mass reduction, Soluble solids gain, Sucrose, Surface area
Year
2023
Journal Food Science & Nutrition
DOI
Researchers Fakhreddin Salehi ، Kimia Goharpour ، HELIA RAZAVI KAMRAN

Abstract

The goal of this work was to examine the effects of sonication time, edible coating concentration (with guar gum), and °Brix (sucrose solution) on the osmotic dehydration (OD) parameters (mass reduction, water loss, soluble solids gain, and rehydration ratio) and the appearance properties (color indices and surface area) of quince slices using a response surface methodology (RSM) approach based on the central composite design (CCD), for the optimization of the process. The process parameters, sonication treatment time (5–10 min; 40 kHz and 150 W), edible coating concentration using guar gum (0.05%–0.15%, w/w), and osmotic concentration using sucrose solution (20%–50%, w/w), were investigated and optimized for OD of quince slices. After each OD process, the quince slices were dehydrated in an oven at 70°C for 240 min. Results demonstrated a good correlation between empirical data with the linear model. Using the optimization method, optimum input operating conditions were determined to be a sonication time of 5 min, guar gum concentration of 0.05%, and sucrose concentration of 37.19°Brix. At this optimum point, the OD process of quince slices reached the optimal mass reduction (17.74%), water loss (25.77%), soluble solids gain (8.03%), rehydration ratio (206.19%), lightness (77.6), redness (0.60), yellowness (34.84), total color change (ΔE) (8.92), and area changes (7.59%).