Litcius/Paper detail

Study on the mechanism of local compression bruising in kiwifruit based on <scp>FEM</scp>

Peixuan Mao, Zhiping Xie, Junhao Wang, Jialing Guo, Manyu Sun

2023Journal of Food Process Engineering11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This study focuses on the relationship between local compression and local bruise volume of kiwifruits by means of finite element method (FEM). The effects of four indenter shapes and three compression directions on the local kiwifruit bruise were considered. The local bruise volume and the irregular cross section area of kiwifruit were calculated. Multi‐scale kiwifruit 3D modelling based on irregular cross‐sectional area computed by slice‐integration method. Local compression bruise was simulated by FEM. The results of the local bruise test show that the contact force and the bruise volume of kiwifruit are positive linear correlation. Comparing the simulation with the experimental, the mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of the reconstructed model is 0.0394, and the R2 of contact force–bruise volume curve is 0.8203. The maximum equivalent forces and abrasions occur in the 0° and 90° loading directions with the square indenter has been showed by FEM results. Practical applications Se‐enriched kiwifruit has high nutrition and economic value. Kiwifruits are often influenced by a variety of factors and processes from harvest to consumption time. Cleaning, transport, and various processing operations including peeling and slicing in the kiwifruit industry are responsible for local bruise to kiwifruit. Therefore, understanding the mechanism of local bruise caused by local contact force of kiwifruit plays an important role in reducing kiwifruit waste in the postharvest stage. Local bruise mechanisms can be used in harvesting and post‐harvest mechanical design and product transportation and positioning equipment.

Topics & Concepts

BruiseFinite element methodCompression (physics)Volume (thermodynamics)Contact areaPostharvestMaterials scienceMathematicsComputer scienceEngineeringStructural engineeringComposite materialHorticulturePhysicsBiologyMedicineSurgeryQuantum mechanicsPostharvest Quality and Shelf Life ManagementPlant Surface Properties and TreatmentsCollagen: Extraction and Characterization