Abstract

Edible fungi are rich in nutrition, but they are susceptible to spoilage, and often prolonged by drying. RF and microwave energy drying have the advantages of short drying time, high energy efficiency and good process control. However, to develop an effective dielectric drying method, it is important to understand dielectric properties, the major factor characterizing the interaction between the electromagnetic energy and the food. At present, there is a lack of research on dielectric properties of edible fungi. In this study, a vector network analyzer and an open-ended coaxial-line probe were employed to measure the dielectric parameters. The dielectric parameters were observed at different temperatures (25–85 °C) for edible fungi powder with moisture content ranging from 5 to 30% wet basis over a frequency range of 1–3000 MHz. The relationship between the dielectric properties and frequency, temperature, and moisture content were obtained via regression analysis. Further, the dielectric penetration depth was calculated, and the effects of frequency, moisture content, and temperature on the penetration depth were also analyzed. The results showed that the dielectric properties of edible fungi powder increased with an increase in moisture content and temperature, while they decreased with increasing frequency. At high moisture content and temperature, the increase in dielectric properties was slightly larger than that at low moisture content and temperature. The dielectric properties changed more evidently at lower radio frequencies than at higher radio frequencies. The penetration depth decreased with an increase in temperature, moisture content, and frequency. It can be concluded that a large penetration depth at radio frequencies below 100 MHz could be used to dry edible fungi on a large scale, whereas microwave energy could be employed for drying edible fungi on a small scale.

Highlights

  • Edible fungi have a large fruiting body, taste delicious, and have high edible, medicinal, and economic values (Sun et al 2019; Xue et al 2019)

  • When the temperature is 75 °C, the frequency increases from 27 MHz to 915 MHz and the dielectric constant of Pleurotus eryngii powder with a moisture content of 12.0% decreases from 19.22 to 9.31, which represents a decrease of approximately 51.6%

  • When the frequency continues to increase to 2450 MHz, the dielectric constant reduces from 9.31 to 7.43, which is a decrease of approximately 20.2%, and the dielectric loss factor increases slightly to 3.44

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Summary

Introduction

Edible fungi (mushrooms) have a large fruiting body, taste delicious, and have high edible, medicinal, and economic values (Sun et al 2019; Xue et al 2019). Edible fungi are a healthy food with significant therapeutic. Qi et al Food Production, Processing and Nutrition (2021) 3:15 the world’s total production. Due to the late development of storage and processing technology of edible fungi in China, the technology is relatively backward, restricting the advancement of the edible fungi industry (Sun et al 2019). When edible fungi are in season, they are abundant, and the overstocking of products causes extremely heavy economic losses (Walde et al 2005). Research on the drying and storage of edible fungi, methods of drying, and drying conditions is the top priority in the development of the current edible fungi industry

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