2008
DOI: 10.1616/1750-2683.0026
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An overview of microwave techniques for the efficient measurement of food materials

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Cited by 11 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…When microwave energy is directed towards a material, part of the energy is reflected, part is transmitted and part is absorbed by the sample. The portion of energy that falls into these three categories have been defined in terms of the scattering parameters and these can be related to the dielectric properties of the sample (Gibson et al, 2008). The fundamental electrical properties through which the interactions between the electromagnetic wave and the material are described is the complex permittivity ε.…”
Section: Definition Of Permittivitymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…When microwave energy is directed towards a material, part of the energy is reflected, part is transmitted and part is absorbed by the sample. The portion of energy that falls into these three categories have been defined in terms of the scattering parameters and these can be related to the dielectric properties of the sample (Gibson et al, 2008). The fundamental electrical properties through which the interactions between the electromagnetic wave and the material are described is the complex permittivity ε.…”
Section: Definition Of Permittivitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A microwave-based technique can be an alternative method for quality assessment on the basis of the electrical permittivity, which is an intrinsic parameter of a material that represents the interaction with the electromagnetic field. Establishing explicit relationships between the permittivity and the agri-food constituents can provide a means of rapid inspection of properties (e.g., moisture, fat and salt content) (Chua et al, 2007;Gibson et al, 2008). Microwave detection methods have various attributes, such as fast (few minutes rather than hours), non-hazardous, capable of measuring bulk properties and less sensitive to environmental conditions (Kharkovsky and Zoughi, 2007;Li et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The degradationof food finally reflects in a variation of permittivity, which provides the possibility to determine the quality with an electromagnetic measurement systems (Venkatesh and Raghavan 2004).The sensor systems are used to obtain electrical data that characterises materials as propagation medium, and these electrical data can be used to calculate the moisture content (Knöchel et al 2001), contamination (Shaji and Akhtar 2013), freshness (Pacquit et al 2006), calories (Lexa et al 2015), and composition of a material (Kent et al 2001).There aremany valuablefindings thatare regarded as building blocks ofmicrowave sensors for food quality evaluation, and they have already demonstrated the feasibility. A number of investigations on measuring food of different categories with microwave sensor technologies have been reported in the recent years, such as corn (Seifi and Alimardani 2010), mashed potato (Guan et al 2004), meat (Clerjon and Damez 2009), chicken (Zhuang et al 2007), beef (Ng et al 2009), fish (Kent et al 2007),prawn, poultry meat and scallops (Kent and Anderson 1996), butter (Shiinokiet al 1998), yoghurt(Bohigaset al 2008, milk (Agranovich et al 2015), fruit juice (Lee et al 2010), vegetable oil (Korostynska et al 2013),cereal grain and seed (Trabelsi and Nelson 2003), etc.General principles, technologies, and somemicrowave sensor based food measurement applicationshave been discussed in several review articles (Nelson 2006;Gibson et al 2008;Jha et al 2011;Chandrasekaranet al2013).…”
Section: Microwave Sensorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The commonlyused methods are: open-ended coaxial probe reflection measurement, waveguide cell transmission measurement, horn antenna free-space measurement, and resonator cavity measurement, etc. (Gibson et al 2008)The system setup of microwave measurement systems are given in Figure 3. Figure 3(b), can be used to measure dielectric properties in different ways, such as transmission method, resonant cavity method, open-ended waveguide line, and free space method.…”
Section: Microwave Measurement Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A microwave-based technique can be an alternative method for quality assessment on the basis of the electrical permittivity, which is an intrinsic parameter of a material that represents the interaction with the electromagnetic field. Establishing explicit relation-ships between the permittivity and the agri-food constituents can provide a means of rapid inspection of properties (e.g., moisture, fat and salt content) [6]. Microwave detection methods have various attributes, such as fast (few minutes rather than hours), nonhazardous, capable of measuring bulk properties and less sensitive to environmental conditions [7].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%