DocumentCode :
3606493
Title :
Empirical Correlation Between Saturation and Dielectric Properties for Vegetal Oils Rating
Author :
Paiter, L. ; Galva?Œ??o, J.R. ; Stevan, S.L.
Author_Institution :
Programa de Pos Grad. em Eng. Eletr., UTFPR, Ponta Grossa, Brazil
Volume :
13
Issue :
7
fYear :
2015
fDate :
7/1/2015 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
2114
Lastpage :
2120
Abstract :
This paper presents a proposal for a sensor to characterize the behavior of vegetable oils in heating cycles, and try to correlate this behavior with the dielectric constant of oil. We analyzed the variation in the dielectric constant of soybean oil samples at four heating and cooling cycles in the range 20 to 120 ° C. After analyzes were performed for sunflower and corn oils checking behaving dielectric for these as well. The maximum temperature was limited to 120 ° C due to prevent melting of the sensor components. The results show that the dielectric constant increases with increasing temperature. For maximum heating temperature, the dielectric constant of the achieved samples, three times its original value. On cooling, the dielectric constant is decreased by a different heating curve. After each complete cycle of heating and cooling, it can be seen that the value of the dielectric constant undergoes a slight increase, indicating a change in the defined physical and chemical properties of the samples. The results suggest that the analysis of the dielectric constant oils can be an easy and rapid method to characterize the state of vegetable oil, and then subjected to temperature variations. However, for this it is necessary to correlate the results of the analysis described in physicochemical analysis to determine a threshold value for the dielectric constant from which the sample is degraded for food use.
Keywords :
capacitive sensors; cooling; heating; melting; permittivity; vegetable oils; chemical properties; cooling cycles; corn oil; dielectric constant; dielectric properties; empirical correlation; food use; heating curve; heating cycles; heating temperature; melting; physical properties; physicochemical analysis; sensor components; soybean oil samples; sunflower oil; temperature 20 degC to 120 degC; vegetable oil behavior; vegetal oil rating; Capacitors; Correlation; Dielectric constant; Heating; Monitoring; Temperature sensors; Vegetable oils; Empiric; degradation; dielectric constant; oil; soybean;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Latin America Transactions, IEEE (Revista IEEE America Latina)
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1548-0992
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TLA.2015.7273766
Filename :
7273766
Link To Document :
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