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Contents
Microwaves To Measure Fruit
Maturity
Microwave ovens deserve their reputation for making food preparation easier
and faster. But in the future, microwave technology may play a taste-tester
role that could mean fresh fruits and vegetables arrive at the table with even
more fresh, just-picked flavor.
The microwaves used in this research were at a very low level. The goal
wasn't to cook the fruits and vegetables but to measure the properties that
influence how electromagnetic waves pass through them.
Two of these properties are well known to physicists and electrical
engineers but may be new to others. The dielectric constant tells how a
material, living or not, stores electric energy. The dielectric loss factor
indicates the ability of a material to absorb energy from an electric field and
convert it to heat. As it turns out, there is a correlation between these
dielectric properties and the maturity of fresh produce.
"We characterized produce from a microwave viewpoint,"says
Agricultural Research Service's Stuart
Nelson. "We did this to build a database and explore its use as a measure
of maturity in peaches."
Nelson, an agricultural engineer, and Roy Forbus, an industrial engineer who
is now retired, measured dielectric properties on 23 fruits and vegetables for
their database. The scientists got their samples at the same place consumers
usually find theirs: the supermarket produce section.
Once they had a database with information about the dielectric properties of
fruits and vegetables in general, Nelson and Forbus were ready for a subsequent
project. They would look at microwaves as a tool for evaluating ripeness in
peaches. This time, the University of Georgia's Agricultural Experiment Station
made peaches available to test --Forbus and a student did the picking.
Why look at microwaves as an evaluating tool? They may detect total soluble
solids, which are really sugars, in fruits such as peaches. Sugars increase
with ripeness. Not enough sugars means your peach was probably taken too soon
from the tree.
Preliminary results suggest low-level microwave measurements may lead to
development of instruments that growers could use to pinpoint ideal harvesting
times. Dielectric properties varied with microwave frequency and the character
of the produce itself, such as the fruit's chemical composition and the amount
of water in it.
A bonus of this research is that the information could help processors of
microwave foods keep the fruit compote in your TV dinner more flavorful during
that fast-track heating.--By Jill
Lee, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
Stuart O. Nelson is in the
USDA-ARS Quality
Assessment Research Unit, Richard B. Russell Agricultural Research Center,
P.O. Box 5677, Athens, GA 30605-5677; phone (706) 546-3101, fax (706) 546-3607.
"Microwaves To Measure Fruit Maturity" was published in the
August 1998 issue of Agricultural Research magazine. Click here to see this
issue's table of contents.
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