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Study on effectiveness of continuous solar dryer integrated with desiccant thermal storage for drying cocoa beans
Author(s) -
Sari Farah Dina,
Himsar Ambarita,
Farel H. Napitupulu,
Hideki Kawai
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
case studies in thermal engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.913
H-Index - 37
ISSN - 2214-157X
DOI - 10.1016/j.csite.2014.11.003
Subject(s) - desiccant , solar dryer , thermal energy storage , relative humidity , materials science , solar energy , air dryer , environmental science , thermal , humidity , adsorption , pulp and paper industry , waste management , composite material , chemistry , meteorology , thermodynamics , physics , ecology , engineering , biology , organic chemistry
The main objective is to assess effectiveness of continuous solar dryer integrated with desiccant thermal storage for drying cocoa beans. Two type of desiccants were tested, molecular sieve 13× (Na86 [(AlO2)86·(SiO2)106]·264H2O) as an adsorbent type and CaCl2 as an absorbent type. The results revealed that during sunshine hours, the maximum temperature within the drying chamber varied from 40 °C to 54 °C. In average, it was 9–12 °C higher than ambient temperature. These temperatures are very suitable for drying cocoa beans. During off-sunshine hours, humidity of air inside the drying chamber was lower than ambient because of the desiccant thermal storage. Drying times for intermittent directs sun drying, solar dryer integrated with adsorbent, and solar dryer integrated with absorbent were 55 h, 41 h, and 30 h, respectively. Specific energy consumptions for direct sun drying, solar dryer integrated with adsorbent, and solar dryer integrated with absorber were 60.4 MJ/kg moist, 18.94 MJ/kg moist, and 13.29 MJ/kg moist, respectively. The main conclusion can be drawn here is that a solar dryer integrated with desiccant thermal storage makes drying using solar energy more effective in term of drying time and specific energy consumption

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