Simulating phase inversion processes by coupled map lattice: Towards the theoretical design of food texture and quality in dairy processing from fresh cream to butter via whipped cream
Erika Nozawa, Tetsuo Deguchi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a coupled map lattice model to simulate phase inversion in dairy products, aiming to guide the theoretical design of textures in whipped cream and butter, with results aligning qualitatively with experimental observations.
Contribution
The study develops a novel CML-based simulation approach for phase inversion in dairy emulsions, enabling texture and quality design in dairy processing.
Findings
Simulated phase inversion processes match experimental viscosity and overrun changes.
Texture patterns are characterized by viscosity or overrun dominance depending on temperature.
The model reproduces high and low whipping temperature processes qualitatively accurately.
Abstract
We present a theoretical model and simulation for the formation dynamics of diverse texture patterns that emerge spontaneously or self-organize during phase inversion processes of fresh cream by mechanical whipping. The results suggest that the model should be applied for theoretically designing the texture and quality of whipped cream and butter products. The modeling complexity in phase inversion processes from fresh cream via whipped cream to butter was overcome by using a well-established complex systems approach, coupled map lattice (CML). The proposed CML consists of a minimal set of procedures (i.e., parameterized nonlinear maps), whipping, coalescence, and flocculation, acting on the appropriately coarse-grained field variables, surface energy, cohesive energy, and velocity (flow) of the emulsion defined on a two-dimensional square lattice. In the CML simulations, two well-known…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFreezing and Crystallization Processes
