Strain Dependence of the Uniaxial Compression Response of Vegetable Shortening

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Authors

External Organisational units

  • Department of Food Science, University of Manitoba

Abstract

Many soft food materials, including vegetableshortening, exhibit complex rheological behavior. For short-ening, a precise determination of rheological behavior isnecessary to understand its functionality as a food ingredient.Commercial vegetable shortening was subjected to mono-tonic and cyclic uniaxial compression tests at a wide range ofloading rates. The elastic modulus determined from unloadingwas a function of strain, varying between 740 kPa in theshortening’s strain hardening region to 220 kPa at large strainwhere perfect plasticity had developed. Visual analysis ofshortening specimens during the compression process showedthat a rate-dependent stress overshoot was attributable to thedevelopment of a shear band following strain hardening. Anelastoviscoplastic constitutive model was developed to definethe complex rate-dependent compression response of vege-table shortening. Using the fundamental parameters obtainedfrom the different types of compression tests, the proposedmodel accurately predicted the uniaxial compression responseof vegetable shortening over a wide range (three decades) ofcompression rates. A model with predictive capabilities oflarge strain properties is desirable because shortening is sub-ject to large strain in essentially all applications.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1319-1326
Number of pages8
JournalThe journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society
Volume90.2013
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 25 Jun 2013
Externally publishedYes