Broadband dielectric characterization systems for food materials
J. K. Hamilton, C. P. Gallagher, C. R. Lawrence, J. R. Bows

TL;DR
This paper reviews methods for broadband dielectric characterization of food materials across 1 MHz to 20 GHz, highlighting how ingredients and temperature affect dielectric properties crucial for microwave processing.
Contribution
It compares multiple dielectric measurement techniques over a wide frequency range and evaluates their consistency on food samples, aiding future microwave heating equipment design.
Findings
All three methods produced comparable dielectric properties at 1 GHz for potato samples.
Dielectric properties vary with moisture content and temperature.
Broadband characterization provides comprehensive data for food processing applications.
Abstract
A detailed knowledge of the dielectric properties of food materials is vital to any electromagnetic-based treatments, ranging from reheating meals in a domestic microwave oven through to sterilization processes. The uniformity and rate of heating of the food is highly dependent upon the dielectric constant and dielectric loss of the food material, with both parameters being intrinsically temperature-dependent. In this work, we explore various methods for the dielectric characterisation of materials over a wide frequency range (1 MHz to 20 GHz), to cover RF and microwave frequencies, as well as understand the impact of ingredients (e.g. salt, sugar) and temperature on free and bound water resonances. Such a large frequency range gives information that is invaluable when designing future equipment that relies on multi-frequency/broadband microwave heating techniques. The characterization…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrowave and Dielectric Measurement Techniques · Food Drying and Modeling
