Pharmacy is a health profession that links the health sciences with the chemical sciences and aims to ensure the safe and effective use of pharmaceutical drugs.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

GRINDING AND CUTTING

Grinding and cutting reduce the size of solid materials by mechanical action, dividing them into smaller particles. Perhaps the most extensive application of grinding in the food industry is in the milling of grains to make flour, but it is used in many other processes, such as in the grinding of corn for manufacture of corn starch, the grinding of sugar and the milling of dried foods, such as vegetables.
Cutting is used to break down large pieces of food into smaller pieces suitable for further processing, such as in the preparation of meat for retail sales and in the preparation of processed meats and processed vegetables.
In the grinding process, materials are reduced in size by fracturing them. The mechanism of fracture is not fully understood, but in the process, the material is stressed by the action of mechanical moving parts in the grinding machine and initially the stress is absorbed internally by the material as strain energy. When the local strain energy exceeds a critical level, which is a function of the material, fracture occurs along lines of weakness and the stored energy is released. Some of the energy is taken up in the creation of new surface, but the greater part of it is dissipated as heat. Time also plays a part in the fracturing process and it appears that material will fracture at lower stress concentrations if these can be maintained for longer periods. Grinding is, therefore, achieved by mechanical stress followed by rupture and the energy required depends upon the hardness of the material and also upon the tendency of the material to crack - its friability.
The force applied may be compression, impact, or shear, and both the magnitude of the force and the time of application affect the extent of grinding achieved. For efficient grinding, the energy applied to the material should exceed, by as small a margin as possible, the minimum energy needed to rupture the material . Excess energy is lost as heat and this loss should be kept as low as practicable.
The important factors to be studied in the grinding process are the amount of energy used and the amount of new surface formed by grinding.

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