Abstract

Spore survival and moisture content are two important properties of biopesticides, and both are related to field biocontrol efficacy and storage shelf life. In this study, Paenibacillus polymyxa (HY96-2) was spray-dried on both pilot plant and production scales, and the effects of inlet and outlet temperatures on spore survival and moisture content were investigated. The results showed that inlet temperatures ranging from 170 to 230 °C (at an outlet temperature of 80 °C) had no obvious effect on the two properties during pilot scale processing, although an inlet temperature of 230 °C resulted in higher feed speed. When the outlet temperature on the pilot scale was reduced from 100 to 80 °C, no obvious variations in spore survival and moisture content were found, while a further reduction from 80 to 65 °C resulted in a decline in spore survival from 81.0 to 67.0% and an increase in moisture content from 2.3 to 31.7%. These results indicate that both outlet temperature and moisture content have an effect on spore survival. Optimum inlet and outlet temperatures for P. polymyxa processing were 230 °C and 85–90 °C on a production scale. Under these conditions, spore survival and moisture content were 83.5–86.6% and 2.73––4.12%, respectively.

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