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  2. Freeze drying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeze_drying

    Contact freeze dryers use contact (conduction) of the food with the heating element to supply the sublimation energy. This type of freeze dryer is a basic model that is simple to set up for sample analysis. One of the major ways contact freeze dryers heat is with shelf-like platforms contacting the samples.

  3. Promession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promession

    Promession is an idea of how to dispose human remains by way of freeze drying. The concept of promession was developed by Swedish biologist Susanne Wiigh-Mäsak, who derived the name from the Italian word for "promise" (promessa). [1] She founded Promessa Organic AB in 1997 to commercially pursue her idea. [2]

  4. IMA Life S.r.l - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMA_Life_S.r.l

    IMA Life also offers freeze-drying technology: industrial, pilot and laboratory freeze dryers. IMA Life designs, manufactures, installs and services integrated systems predominantly for the pharmaceutical primary packaging market. It has been in the market of freeze dryer manufacturing for more than 50 years.

  5. Food drying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_drying

    Although freeze-drying is more expensive than traditional dehydration techniques, it also mitigates the change in flavor, texture, and nutritional value. In addition, another widely used industrial method of drying of food is convective hot air drying. Industrial hot air dryers are simple and easy to design, construct and maintain.

  6. Cryofixation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryofixation

    The ultimate objective is to freeze the specimen so rapidly (at 10 4 to 10 6 K per second) that ice crystals are unable to form, or are prevented from growing big enough to cause damage to the specimen's ultrastructure. The formation of samples containing specimens in amorphous ice is the "holy grail" of biological cryomicroscopy. [citation needed]

  7. Supercritical drying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercritical_drying

    In freeze-drying, this means going around to the left (low temperature, low pressure; blue arrow). However, some structures are disrupted even by the solid–gas boundary . Supercritical drying, on the other hand, goes around the line to the right, on the high-temperature, high-pressure side (red arrow).

  8. Spray drying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spray_drying

    The spray drying technique was first described in 1860 with the first spray dryer instrument patented by Samuel Percy in 1872. [citation needed] With time, the spray drying method grew in popularity, at first mainly for milk production in the 1920s and during World War II, when there was a need to reduce the weight and volume of food and other materials.

  9. Freeze-dried ice cream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeze-dried_ice_cream

    Freeze-dried ice cream, also called astronaut ice cream or space ice cream, is ice cream that has had most of the water removed from it by a freeze-drying process. Compared to regular ice cream, it can be kept at room temperature without melting, is dry and more brittle and rigid, but still soft when bitten into.

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