July
2002
Volume
79
Number
4
Pages
511
—
517
Authors
Chaoying
Fang
1
and
Grant M.
Campbell
1
,
2
Affiliations
Satake Centre for Grain Process Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering, UMIST, Manchester, M60 1QD, UK.
Corresponding author. Phone: +44 (0)161 200 4472. Fax +44 (0)161 200 4399. E-mail: g.campbell@umist.ac.uk.
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Accepted January 31, 2002.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The endosperm and bran of a wheat grain have different mechanical properties and break differently under the same stresses. Stress-strain analysis was used to model the factors affecting wheat kernel breakage during milling using fluted rolls. The planes of principal compressive and tensile stress and the maximum shear stresses, along which the kernel is most likely to be broken, were calculated for a sharp-to-sharp roll disposition. With the occurrence of compressive stress in the horizontal direction and shear stress in the vertical direction, a kernel tends to break along a principal tensile stress plane because the tensile strength of the endosperm is much smaller than its compressive strength. The model presented quantifies the mathematical relationship of three design and operational factors affecting the principal stresses and the maximum shear stresses: roll gap, differential, and roll diameter. High-speed video was used to observe wheat breakage events during milling; the results show consistency with the theoretical analysis.
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© 2002 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.