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Homogenizing valve design and its influence on milk fat globule dispersion: II. High rate of flow (1000 1 h-1, 6000 < Re < 15000)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 2009

Leslie W. Phipps
Affiliation:
National Institute for Research in Dairying, Shinfield, Reading RG2 9AT, UK

Summary

The performance characteristics of a valve accepting a high rate of milk flow and operating at Reynolds’ numbers (Re) of 6000–15000 have been studied. Features of valve design which improved homogenizing efficiency were identified. As with small valves operating at lower Re numbers, efficiency increased as D0/D increased beyond 0·5; for D0/D ≈ 0·7, a 15% reduction in mean globule size was obtained. Changes of face angle up to 45° had virtually no effect on milk fat globule dispersion. The use of impact rings produced only small improvements in dispersion. The incorporation of perforated insets led to substantial globule size reductions of 15–25% or the equivalent in reductions of homogenizer energy consumption of 12–35%.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Proprietors of Journal of Dairy Research 1982

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References

REFERENCES

Phipps, L. W. 1974 Cavitation and separated flow in a simple homogenizing valve and their influence on the break-up of fat globules in milk. Journal of Dairy Research 41 18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phipps, L. W. 1982 Homogenizing valve design and its influence on milk fat globule dispersion. I. Low rate of flow (100 1h-1, Re < 3000) Journal of Dairy Research 49 309315CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mohr, K.-H. 1980 [Mechanism of high pressure homogenization. I. Turbulence or cavitation as mechanisms of disruption.] Lebensmittelindustrie 27 399403Google Scholar