• Title/Summary/Keyword: homogenization

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Influence of pH, Emulsifier Concentration, and Homogenization Condition on the Production of Stable Oil-in-Water Emulsion Droplets Coated with Fish Gelatin

  • Surh, Jeong-Hee
    • Food Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.16 no.6
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    • pp.999-1005
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    • 2007
  • An oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion [20 wt% com oil, 0.5-6.0 wt% fish gelatin (FG), pH 3.0] was produced by high pressure homogenization, and the influence of pH, protein concentration, and homogenization condition on the formation of FG-stabilized emulsions was assessed by measuring particle size distribution, electrical charge, creaming stability, microstructure, and free FG concentration in the emulsions. Optical microscopy indicated that there were some large droplets ($d>10\;{\mu}m$) in all FG-emulsions, nevertheless, the amount of large droplets tended to decrease with increasing FG concentration. More than 90% of FG was present free in the continuous phase of the emulsions. To facilitate droplet disruption and prevent droplet coalescence within the homogenizer, homogenization time was adjusted in O/W emulsions stabilized by 2.0 or 4.0 wt% FG. However, the increase in the number of pass rather promoted droplet coalescence. This study has shown that the FG may have some limited use as a protein emulsifier in O/W emulsions.

A Study on the Topology Optimization in Magnetic Fields - Comparisons Between the Density Method and the Homogenization Design Method (자기장 내의 위상최적화 방법에 대한 연구 - 밀도법과 균질화법의 비교 -)

  • Yoo, Jeong-Hoon
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.28 no.4
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    • pp.370-377
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    • 2004
  • The density approach and the homogenization design method are representative methods in topology optimization problems. In the topology optimization in magnetic fields, those methods are applied based on the results of the applications In elastic fields. In this study, the density method is modified considering the concept of the homogenization design method. Also, the results of the topology optimization in magnetic fields by the modified density method as well as the homogenization method are compared especially focusing the change of the penalization parameter in the density approach. The effect of the definition of the design domain such as global/local design domain is also discussed.

ANALYSIS OF THE PERMEABILITY CHARACTERISTICS ALONG ROUGH-WALLED FRACTURES USING A HOMOGENIZATION METHOD

  • Chae, Byung-Gon;Choi, Jung-Hae;Ichikawa, Yasuaki;Seo, Yong-Seok
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.44 no.1
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    • pp.43-52
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    • 2012
  • To compute a permeability coefficient along a rough fracture that takes into account the fracture geometry, this study performed detailed measurements of fracture roughness using a confocal laser scanning microscope, a quantitative analysis of roughness using a spectral analysis, and a homogenization analysis to calculate the permeability coefficient on the microand macro-scale. The homogenization analysis is a type of perturbation theory that characterizes the behavior of microscopically inhomogeneous material with a periodic boundary condition in the microstructure. Therefore, it is possible to analyze accurate permeability characteristics that are represented by the local effect of the facture geometry. The Cpermeability coefficients that are calculated using the homogenization analysis for each rough fracture model exhibit an irregular distribution and do not follow the relationship of the cubic law. This distribution suggests that the permeability characteristics strongly depend on the geometric conditions of the fractures, such as the roughness and the aperture variation. The homogenization analysis may allow us to produce more accurate results than are possible with the preexisting equations for calculating permeability.

DIFFUSION PIECEWISE HOMOGENIZATION VIA FLUX DISCONTINUITY RATIOS

  • Sanchez, Richard;Dante, Giorgio;Zmijarevic, Igor
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.45 no.6
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    • pp.707-720
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    • 2013
  • We analyze piecewise homogenization with flux-weighted cross sections and preservation of averaged currents at the boundary of the homogenized domain. Introduction of a set of flux discontinuity ratios (FDR) that preserve reference interface currents leads to preservation of averaged region reaction rates and fluxes. We consider the class of numerical discretizations with one degree of freedom per volume and per surface and prove that when the homogenization and computing meshes are equal there is a unique solution for the FDRs which exactly preserve interface currents. For diffusion submeshing we introduce a Jacobian-Free Newton-Krylov method and for all cases considered obtain an 'exact' numerical solution (eight digits for the interface currents). The homogenization is completed by extending the familiar full assembly homogenization via flux discontinuity factors to the sides of regions laying on the boundary of the piecewise homogenized domain. Finally, for the familiar nodal discretization we numerically find that the FDRs obtained with no submesh (nearly at no cost) can be effectively used for whole-core diffusion calculations with submesh. This is not the case, however, for cell-centered finite differences.

Effect of Homogenization Pressure on Plasmin Activity and Mechanical Stress-Induced Fat Aggregation of Commercially Sterilized Ultra High Temperature Milk during Storage

  • Kim, Sun-Chul;Yun, So-Yul;Ahn, Na-Hyun;Kim, Seong-Min;Imm, Jee-Young
    • Food Science of Animal Resources
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    • v.40 no.5
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    • pp.734-745
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    • 2020
  • Commercially sterilized ultra high temperature (UHT) milk was manufactured at different homogenization pressures (20, 25, and 30 MPa), and changes in fat particle size, mechanical stress-induced fat aggregation, plasmin activity, and lipid oxidation were monitored during ambient storage of the UHT milk for up to 16 wk. The particle sizes of milk fat globules were significantly decreased as homogenization pressure increased from 20 to 30 MPa (p<0.05). The presence of mechanical stress-induced fat aggregates in milk produced at 20 MPa was significantly higher than for UHT milk produced at either 25 or 30 MPa. This difference was maintained all throughout the storage. There were no significant differences in plasmin activity, trichloroacetic acid (12%, w/v) soluble peptides, and the extent of lipid oxidation. Based on these results, an increase of homogenization pressure from 20 (the typical homogenization pressure employed in the Korea dairy industry) to 25-30 MPa significantly decreased mechanical stress-induced fat aggregation without affecting susceptibility to lipid oxidation during storage.

Applying Response Surface Methodology to Predict the Homogenization Efficiency of Milk (우유 균질 조건 예측을 위한 반응표면방법론의 활용)

  • Sungsue Rheem;Sejong Oh
    • Journal of Dairy Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.41 no.1
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2023
  • Response surface methodology (RSM) is a statistical approach widely used in food processing to optimize the formulation, processing conditions, and quality of food products. The homogenization process is achieved by subjecting milk to high pressure, which breaks down fat globules and disperses fat more evenly throughout milk. This study focuses on an application of RSM including the logit transformation to predict the efficiency of milk homogenization, which can be maximized by minimizing the relative difference in fat percentage between the top part and the remainder of milk. To avoid a negative predicted value of the minimum of this proportion, the logit transformation is used to turn the proportion into the logit, whose possible values are real numbers. Then, the logit values are modeled and optimized. Subsequently, the logistic transformation is used to turn the predicted logit into the predicted proportion. From our model, the optimum condition for the maximized efficiency of milk homogenization was predicted as the combination of a homogenizer pressure of 30 MPa, a storage temperature of 10℃, and a storage period of 10 days. Additionally, with a combination of a homogenizer pressure of 30 MPa, a storage temperature of 10℃, and a storage period of 50 days, the level of milk homogenization was predicted to be acceptable, even with the problem of extrapolation taken into account.

Effect of Alloying Elements and Homogenization Treatment on Carbide Formation Behavior in M2 High Speed Steels (합금성분변화와 균질화처리에 따른 M2 고속도강의 탄화물 형성거동)

  • Ha, Tae Kwon;Yang, Eun Ig;Jung, Jae Young;Park, Shin Wha
    • Korean Journal of Metals and Materials
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    • v.48 no.7
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    • pp.589-597
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    • 2010
  • In the present study, the effect of variation in alloying elements on the carbide formation behavior during casting and homogenization treatment of M2 high speed steels was investigated. M2 high speed steels of various compositions were produced by vacuum induction melting. Contents of C, Cr, W, Mo, and V were varied from the basic composition of 0.8C, 0.3Si, 0.2Mn, 4.0Cr, 6.0W, 5.0Mo, and 2.0V in weight percent. Homogenization treatment at $1150^{\circ}C$ for 1.5 hr followed by furnace cooling was performed on the ingots. Area fraction and chemical compositions of eutectic carbide in as-cast and homogenized ingots were analyzed. Area fraction of eutectic carbide appeared to be higher in the ingots with higher contents of alloying elements the area fraction of eutectic carbide also appeared to be higher on the surface regions than in the center regions of ingots. As a result of the homogenization treatment, $M_2C$ carbide, which was the primary eutectic carbide in the as-cast ingots, decomposed into thermodynamically stable carbides, MC and $M_6C$. The latter carbide was found to be the main one after homogenization. Fine carbides uniformly distributed in the matrix was found to be MC type carbide and coarsened by homogenization.

Multilevel Homogenization-Based Framework for Effective Analysis of Structures with Complex Regularity (복합 규칙성을 가진 구조물의 효과적인 해석을 위한 다단계 균질화기반 해석 프레임워크)

  • Youngjae Jeon;Wanjae Jang;Seongmin Chang
    • Journal of the Computational Structural Engineering Institute of Korea
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.19-26
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    • 2023
  • Because of the development of computational resources, an entire structure in which many components are combined can be analyzed. To do so, the calculation time and number of data points are increased. In many practical industry structures, there are many parts with repeated patterns. To analyze the repetitive structures effectively, a homogenization method is usually employed. In a homogenization module, including commercial programs, it is generally assumed that a unit cell is repeated in all directions. However, the practical industry structures usually have complicated, repeated patterns or structures. Complicated patterns are difficult to address using the conventional homogenization method. Therefore, in this study, a multilevel homogenization method was devised to consider complex regularities. The proposed homogenization method divides the structure into several areas and performs multiple homogenizations, resulting in a more accurate analysis than that provided by the previous method.

Effect of Ultrasonic treatment on the Isolation of the Chlamydospores of Cylindrocarpon destructans Causing Root rot of Panax ginseng (초음파처리에 의한 인삼 뿌리썩음병균 Cylindrocarpon destructans 후막포자의 분리)

  • 조대휘;유연현
    • Journal of Ginseng Research
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.53-57
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    • 2000
  • Chlamydospores were isolated from hyphae of Cylindrocanon destmctans by homogenization and/or ultrasonic treatment. Rate of the isolated chlamydospores by the homogenization with glass tissue grinder were 9.8% of all total chlamydospores formed in the culture of C. destructans. The length of mycelial fragments after the homogenization was about 400㎛ They were, however, formed in clusters of the chlamydospores and the mycelia The rate of the isolated chlamydospores from additional ultrasonic treatment after the homogenization of the mycelia were 74.3%. The length of mycelial fragments with the ultrasonic treatment was about 20 fm and chlamydospores seemed to be isolated from the mycelial mats and dispersed evenly in the culture. The numbers of chlamydospore in a catena were 1 to 8 cells after the homogenization on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Meanwhile the numbers of them after added ultrasonic treatment were 1 to 4 cells. Germination percentages of the isolated chlamydospores from the ultrasonic treatment were 46.8% after incubation of 2 days on PDA at 20。C and 60.7% after incubation of 13 days at 5。C, respectively. Germination rate of chlamydospores to the total chlamydospores produced by the ultrasonic treatment was 55.8%. However, it was increased to 74% when it was measured in the germinated catenae to the total catenae.

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Homogenization based continuum damage mechanics model for monotonic and cyclic damage evolution in 3D composites

  • Jain, Jayesh R.;Ghosh, Somnath
    • Interaction and multiscale mechanics
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    • v.1 no.2
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    • pp.279-301
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    • 2008
  • This paper develops a 3D homogenization based continuum damage mechanics (HCDM) model for fiber reinforced composites undergoing micromechanical damage under monotonic and cyclic loading. Micromechanical damage in a representative volume element (RVE) of the material occurs by fiber-matrix interfacial debonding, which is incorporated in the model through a hysteretic bilinear cohesive zone model. The proposed model expresses a damage evolution surface in the strain space in the principal damage coordinate system or PDCS. PDCS enables the model to account for the effect of non-proportional load history. The loading/unloading criterion during cyclic loading is based on the scalar product of the strain increment and the normal to the damage surface in strain space. The material constitutive law involves a fourth order orthotropic tensor with stiffness characterized as a macroscopic internal variable. Three dimensional damage in composites is accounted for through functional forms of the fourth order damage tensor in terms of components of macroscopic strain and elastic stiffness tensors. The HCDM model parameters are calibrated from homogenization of micromechanical solutions of the RVE for a few representative strain histories. The proposed model is validated by comparing results of the HCDM model with pure micromechanical analysis results followed by homogenization. Finally, the potential of HCDM model as a design tool is demonstrated through macro-micro analysis of monotonic and cyclic damage progression in composite structures.