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Effects of Roll Gap, Kernel Shape, and Moisture on Wheat Breakage Modeled Using the Double Normalized Kumaraswamy Breakage Function

January 2014 Volume 91 Number 1
Pages 8 — 17
Kenneth F. Fuh,1 Joanna M. Coate,1 and Grant M. Campbell1,2

Satake Centre for Grain Process Engineering, School of Chemical Engineering and Analytical Science, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, United Kingdom. Corresponding author. Phone: +44 (0) 161 306 4472. Fax: +44 (0) 161 306 4399. E-mail: grant.campbell@manchester.ac.uk


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Accepted June 20, 2013.
ABSTRACT

Flour milling separates endosperm from bran through repeated roller milling and sifting, in which the size distribution of particles produced by the initial breakage of the wheat kernels critically affects the process. The double normalized Kumaraswamy breakage function (DNKBF), previously developed to describe wheat breakage during roller milling, was extended to refine the modeling of the effect of roll gap on breakage. The DNKBF describes two populations of particles arising from roller milling of wheat, a narrow peak of mid-sized particles and a wider distribution of both small and very large particles. A new dataset was obtained from milling a set of wheat samples bred to give a range of shapes by cross-breeding a conventional wheat, Cappelle, with an almost spherical wheat, Triticum sphaerococcum. A residual analysis showed a statistically significant effect of kernel shape on breakage using this new dataset. This analysis supports earlier suggestions that more elongated kernels break to give slightly larger particles than more spherical kernels of equivalent hardness, because of the relatively greater bran content of elongated kernels. The extended DNKBF was also used to model effects of moisture content, showing a distinct disjunction at around 16% moisture that aligns with commercial practice for wheat milling.



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