Literature DB >> 24740612

A particle based model to simulate microscale morphological changes of plant tissues during drying.

H C P Karunasena1, W Senadeera, R J Brown, Y T Gu.   

Abstract

Fundamental understanding on microscopic physical changes of plant materials is vital to optimize product quality and processing techniques, particularly in food engineering. Although grid-based numerical modelling can assist in this regard, it becomes quite challenging to overcome the inherited complexities of these biological materials especially when such materials undergo critical processing conditions such as drying, where the cellular structure undergoes extreme deformations. In this context, a meshfree particle based model was developed which is fundamentally capable of handling extreme deformations of plant tissues during drying. The model is built by coupling a particle based meshfree technique: Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) and a Discrete Element Method (DEM). Plant cells were initiated as hexagons and aggregated to form a tissue which also accounts for the characteristics of the middle lamella. In each cell, SPH was used to model cell protoplasm and DEM was used to model the cell wall. Drying was incorporated by varying the moisture content, the turgor pressure, and cell wall contraction effects. Compared to the state of the art grid-based microscale plant tissue drying models, the proposed model can be used to simulate tissues under excessive moisture content reductions incorporating cell wall wrinkling. Also, compared to the state of the art SPH-DEM tissue models, the proposed model better replicates real tissues and the cell-cell interactions used ensure efficient computations. Model predictions showed good agreement both qualitatively and quantitatively with experimental findings on dried plant tissues. The proposed modelling approach is fundamentally flexible to study different cellular structures for their microscale morphological changes at dehydration.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24740612     DOI: 10.1039/c4sm00526k

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soft Matter        ISSN: 1744-683X            Impact factor:   3.679


  2 in total

1.  Biomechanics of Collective Cell Migration in Cancer Progression: Experimental and Computational Methods.

Authors:  Catalina-Paula Spatarelu; Hao Zhang; Dung Trung Nguyen; Xinyue Han; Ruchuan Liu; Qiaohang Guo; Jacob Notbohm; Jing Fan; Liyu Liu; Zi Chen
Journal:  ACS Biomater Sci Eng       Date:  2019-05-22

2.  Impact of drying methods on the changes of fruit microstructure unveiled by X-ray micro-computed tomography.

Authors:  Kevin Prawiranto; Thijs Defraeye; Dominique Derome; Andreas Bühlmann; Stefan Hartmann; Pieter Verboven; Bart Nicolai; Jan Carmeliet
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2019-04-04       Impact factor: 3.361

  2 in total

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