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Proceeding Paper

Development of a Device for Staged Determination of Water Activity and Moisture Content †

1
Bundesanstalt für Materialforschund und-prüfung (BAM), 10115 Berlin, Germany
2
Hochschule Hamm-Lippstadt, 59063 Hamm, Germany
3
German Aerospace Center (DLR), Hardthausen am Kocher 74239, Germany
4
Dr. wernecke feuchtemesstechnik GmbH, 14480 Potsdam, Germany
5
Prignitz Mikrosystemtechnik GmbH, Prignitz Mikrosystemtechnik GmbH, Wittenberge, Germany
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Presented at the Eurosensors 2018 Conference, Graz, Austria, 9–12 September 2018.
Published: 10 December 2018
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of EUROSENSORS 2018)

Abstract

:
Moisture content and water activity are important parameters for quality characterization of products like bulk materials, powders, granules. Thus, an exact determination is necessarily required in a wide range of industrial applications. Moisture of materials is the content of non-chemically bound water in a solid or liquid. Water activity (aw) is a characteristic/parameter of the non-chemically bound (“free”) water in materials and is measured as humidity over a solid/liquid surface at constant temperature (equilibrium moisture content). It is an important parameter to characterize the quality of e.g., pharmaceutical and food products. In our contribution, we present the developed MOISHUM device for staged determination of water activity and moisture content of liquid and solid materials.

1. Introduction

The occurrence of water is essential for our daily life. It is omnipresent and has a great influence on nature and technology. Despite the indispensable necessity of water, it is also one of the most frequent contaminants and disturbances in technical and food areas. Among other things, it influences the quality and properties of materials. While a high-water content is desired in some goods, it can also lead to a reduction in product quality and an associated loss in value as well as function. The moisture in the material as well as the water activity have decisive influences on the product quality, shelf life of food or mould growth on building materials. This influence of moisture makes the quantification of moisture content and water activity as an important parameter for quality control, quality assurance and consumer protection [1].
Moisture describes the presence of water in solid materials. This water can be adsorbed or desorbed by a material. In the literature moisture is described with various parameters. The moisture is defined as water mass mw, which desorbs after drying. A common term for describing material moisture is the gravimetric water content Wg. This expresses the percentage of the water mass to the total mass of a material.
A reliable determination of humidity and moisture requires the integration of suitable measuring technology. In a ZIM project of the German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy, an innovative measuring system named MOISHUM was developed, which allows the traceable, reproducible and reliable determination of moisture (MOIS) and water activity (HUMidity) of powdered materials in a staged process. Here are presented the results on powdered coffee.

2. Experimental Setup

Figure 1 shows the designed MOISHUM device. The designed MOISHUM device includes two humidity sensors (a capacitive and a coulometric [2]) two Pt100 temperature sensors and two Peltier devices for precise temperature control of the chamber. An analytical balance AUW120D (Shimadzu) was used for mass determinations in comparison to the MOISHUM values.
The measurement for the aw value determination started by moving the sample holder to position two Figure 1b. The temperature and in this case the equilibrium relative humidity (Uw,ERH) [1] which correspond to water activity are determined by an SHT-25 sensor (Sensirion).
aw = Uw,ERH/100%
The water content Wg of the investigated powdered coffee sample ms is determined by coulometric sensors [2,3]. These humidity measurements bases on FARADAY’s law of electrolysis. Equation (3) describes the relationship, where mw is the electrolytically determined water mass, Q is the charge amount, Mv the molar mass of water, F Faraday’s constant F = 96485.33289 C·mol−1 and z the number of exchanged electrons (z = 2).
Wg = mw/ms × 100%
mw = (Q × Mv)/(F × z)

3. Results

3.1. Functionality Test

The functionality of the measuring device was severally tested by putting amounts of distilled water into the aluminum sample holder. After closing the sample holder with a lid, it was inserted into the MOISHUM adapter. In the first step, it was pushed to the top position of the grid element and the lid screwed into the drilled thread. In the second step, the position of the sample holder was moved to the middle position of the raster element for aw-value determination at set temperature. In this position, the sample is exposed to the capacitive humidity sensor (SHT-25, Sensirion) that measures the humidity above sample at constant temperature. In this case, the aw-value was determined without being influenced by the coulometric sensor. After approximately 30 min, the measured aw-value raises to 0.99. The absolute deviation from the measured aw-value compared to the theoretical of water aw = 1.00 is Δ aw = −0.01. Thus, the SHT25 sensor has an uncertainty of 4% at relative humidity above Uw = 90%, this difference is negligible. In the third step, the water amount was electrolytically determined by increasing the sample holder temperature to (105 ± 0.2) °C. The relative deviation in comparison to the measured water amount on an analytical balance ranges between −2.2 and 2.2%, Table 1.

3.2. Water Activity, Moisture Determinations and Sorption Isotherm of a Powdered Coffee

The MOISHUM measuring cell was applied for the determination of water activity, water content and sorption isotherm at 25 ± 0.2 °C of powdered coffee. The determined aw value by MOISHUM measuring cell results in a relative humidity of 22.5% after 16 min which corresponds to an aw-value of 0.225, Figure 2a). The control measurement with the aw measuring instrument (HygroPalm, Rotronic) determines a aw value of 0.27 and the literature defines an aw value from 0.1 to 0.3 [4]. Thus, both values are within the limit for coffee. In general, water activity can be characterized as (a) dry up to aw < 0.6, (b) semi-humid aw = 0.6 to 0.85 and (c) humid aw = 0.85 to 1.00. The water content determination of 46 mg powdered coffee with the coulometric sensors shows Figure 2b). The area under the current curve is equal to the chemically converted water of the coffee sample (red line). The blue line shows the accumulated water mass of the coffee sample. The final mass is 1.59 mg. Based on the initial coffee mass, this mass corresponds to a water content of 3.5 %. The mean of five measurements is 3.2 % ± 0.3 %. The reference value by drying method is 3.6 %. The difference of the determined water content with MOISHUM measuring cell is -0.4 % in comparison to the reference value.
The relation between water content and the water activity can be given by sorption isotherms [1,5]. Figure 3 shows the determined sorption isotherm at 25 °C by MOISHUM measuring cell and in comparison, to a reference. The applied model function is the Guggenheim,
Anderson, and de Boer (GAB) model [6].
W g = X m Z K a w ( 1 K a w ) ( 1 K a w + C K a w )
where Wg is the water content, aw is the water activity value and the parameters Z, K, Xm.
The course of the sorption isotherm is in accordance with the values from the reference [7]. However, there are deviations in the higher aw value range.

4. Conclusions

The MOISHUM measuring cell was developed for staged aw value and water content determination. MOISHUM’s applicability was tested and proven on powdered coffee in comparison to data from literature. The measuring times for aw values are in the range of 20 min to 90 min (5% to 95% relative Humidity) and for water content determinations in the range 45 min to 180 min.

Funding

This research and development was funded by Zentrales Innovationsprogramm Mittelstand (ZIM) of Germany’s Federal Ministry of Energy and Economic Affairs—grant number KF2201085KM4.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Jörg Schlischka, Jörg Latzel, Holger Piefke, Sergej Johann and Michael Hofmann for technical support. In memoriam to Thomas Hübert.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Wernecke, R.; Wernecke, J. Industrial Moisture and Humidity Measurement—A Practical Guide; Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA: Weinheim, Germany, 2014. [Google Scholar]
  2. Measurement of Gas Humidity—Methods of Measurement; VDI/VDE 3514-2:2013-03; Düsseldorf, Germany, 2013.
  3. Hübert, T.; Schuffenhauer, W.; Wernecke, R. Self-monitoring and regenerating system for on-line trace moisture measurements in chemical process gases. Chem. Ingenieur Technik 2000, 72, 1380–1382. [Google Scholar]
  4. Schmidt, S.J.; Fontana, A.J., Jr. Water activity values of select food ingredients and products. In Water Activity in Foods; Barbosa-Cánovas, G.V., Fontana, A.J., Jr., Schmidt, S.J., Labuza, T.P., Eds.; Wiley-Blackwell: Hoboken, NJ, USA, 2007; Volume 1, pp. 407–420. [Google Scholar]
  5. Werner, B.; Matissek, R. Lebensmittelchemie; Springer: Heidelberg, Germany, 2011; Volume 7. [Google Scholar]
  6. Cepeda, E.; de Latierro, R.O.; San Jose, M.J.; Olazar, M. Water sorption isotherms of roasted coffee and coffee roasted with sugar. Int. J. Food Sci. Technol. 1999, 34, 287–290. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Labuza, T.P.; Altunakar, B. Water activity prediction and moisture sorption isotherms. In Water Activity in Foods: Fundamentals and Applications; Barbosa-Cánovas, G.V., Fontana, A.J., Jr., Schmidt, S.J., Labuza, T.P., Eds.; Wiley-Blackwell: Hoboken, NJ, USA, 2007; Volume 1, pp. 109–154. [Google Scholar]
Figure 1. View on the MOISHUM measuring cell (a), aluminum sample cap for the sample under test | sample holder and sample cap | process steps element (b).
Figure 1. View on the MOISHUM measuring cell (a), aluminum sample cap for the sample under test | sample holder and sample cap | process steps element (b).
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Figure 2. Stepped process results on the determination of aw-value (a) and water amount mw (b) on a powdered coffee sample by the MOISHUM measuring cell (DC voltage 18 V, Shunt resistance 100 Ω.
Figure 2. Stepped process results on the determination of aw-value (a) and water amount mw (b) on a powdered coffee sample by the MOISHUM measuring cell (DC voltage 18 V, Shunt resistance 100 Ω.
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Figure 3. Sorption isotherm at 25 °C of powdered coffee with MOISHUM data and GAB-function in black and the difference in brown pentagons—MOISHUM GAB-parameters: Xm = 8.230, C = 1.556 and K = 0.822 in comparison to Cepeda et al.’s parameter: Xm = 4.203, C = 4.186 and K = 0.941 [6].
Figure 3. Sorption isotherm at 25 °C of powdered coffee with MOISHUM data and GAB-function in black and the difference in brown pentagons—MOISHUM GAB-parameters: Xm = 8.230, C = 1.556 and K = 0.822 in comparison to Cepeda et al.’s parameter: Xm = 4.203, C = 4.186 and K = 0.941 [6].
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Table 1. Overview of electrolytically determined amounts of water by MOISHUM measuring cell.
Table 1. Overview of electrolytically determined amounts of water by MOISHUM measuring cell.
Initial Water
Mass mw0/mg
Q/CDetermined
mw/mg
Relative Deviation
Δmw/%
10.1105.8319.88−2.2
1.9320.6671.930.0
2.1022.0592.06−1.9
2.0421.9522.050.5
1.8019.2751.80−2.2
1.8419.7031.842.2
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MDPI and ACS Style

Tiebe, C.; Detjens, M.; Fechner, A.; Sielemann, S.; Lorek, A.; Wernecke, R.; Stoltenberg, H. Development of a Device for Staged Determination of Water Activity and Moisture Content. Proceedings 2018, 2, 881. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/proceedings2130881

AMA Style

Tiebe C, Detjens M, Fechner A, Sielemann S, Lorek A, Wernecke R, Stoltenberg H. Development of a Device for Staged Determination of Water Activity and Moisture Content. Proceedings. 2018; 2(13):881. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/proceedings2130881

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tiebe, Carlo, Marc Detjens, Annika Fechner, Stefanie Sielemann, Andreas Lorek, Roland Wernecke, and Hartmut Stoltenberg. 2018. "Development of a Device for Staged Determination of Water Activity and Moisture Content" Proceedings 2, no. 13: 881. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/proceedings2130881

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