Abstract

ABSTRACT The effect of internal heating by microwave on the drying behavior of a slab was studied. A wet sample of kaolin pressed into a slab was subjected in microwave irradiation of 2.45 GHz. The absorption of microwave energy into a wet slab can be expressed by a function of the moisture content and the pathway length, which is a similar form to Lambert-Beer's law. The drying behavior was compared among three modes: microwave irradiation, hot air heating and radiation heating in an oven. Microwave heating with a constant power resulted in breaking the sample when the internal temperature achieves at 373 K. However, if the power was controlled to maintain the temperature less than the boiling point of water, the drying succeeded without any crack generation until the completion with a significantly faster drying rate than in convective heating or in the oven. It is also noted that the transient behavior of the temperature is quite different from the conventional drying.

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