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Dive into the research topics where Stefan Nöbel is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan Nöbel.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2012

Apparent voluminosity of casein micelles determined by rheometry

Stefan Nöbel; K. Weidendorfer; Jörg Hinrichs

The voluminosity of casein micelles was studied by means of static rheometry. In concentrated casein micelle suspensions with fluid-like flow properties to random-close packing, the reduced viscosity was obtained and linked via the Krieger-Dougherty model of volume fraction effect. The temperature dependency of hydration was fitted in a wide temperature (5°C≤θ≤35°C) and mass fraction range (0.01≤w≤0.16). The results of our study suggested that the voluminosity of casein micelles decreased with increasing temperature and asymptotically reached a plateau (θ>30°C) as a consequence of the protein swelling and decreasing water immobilization. The obtained apparent voluminosity of native casein micelles dispersed in UF permeate was 5.0 ml g(-1) at 5°C, 4.1 ml g(-1) at 20°C, and 3.7 ml g(-1) at 35°C.


Food Research International | 2016

Vibration-induced particle formation during yogurt fermentation — Industrial vibration measurements and development of an experimental setup

Adrian Körzendörfer; Philipp Temme; Stefan Nöbel; Eberhard Schlücker; Jörg Hinrichs

The aim of the study was to investigate the effects of vibrations during yogurt fermentation. Machinery such as pumps and switching valves generate vibrations that may disturb the gelation by inducing large particles. Oscillation measurements on an industrial yogurt production line showed that oscillations are transferred from pumps right up to the fermentation tanks. An experimental setup (20L) was developed to study the effect of vibrations systematically. The fermenters were decoupled with air springs to enable reference fermentations under idle conditions. A vibration exciter was used to stimulate the fermenters. Frequency sweeps (25-1005Hz, periodic time 10s) for 20min from pH5.4 induced large particles. The number of visible particles was significantly increased from 35±4 (reference) to 89±9 particles per 100g yogurt. Rheological parameters of the stirred yogurt samples were not influenced by vibrations.


Food Research International | 2017

Particle formation induced by sonication during yogurt fermentation – Impact of exopolysaccharide-producing starter cultures on physical properties

Adrian Körzendörfer; Stefan Nöbel; Jörg Hinrichs

Two major quality defects of yogurt are syneresis and the presence of large particles, and several reasons have been extensively discussed. Vibrations during fermentation, particularly generated by pumps, must be considered as a further cause as latest research showed that both ultrasound and low frequencies induced visible particles. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of sonication during fermentation with starter cultures differing in exopolysaccharide (EPS) synthesis on the physical properties of set (syneresis, firmness) and stirred yogurt (large particles, laser diffraction, rheology). Skim milk was fermented with starter cultures YC-471 (low EPS) or YF-L 901 (high EPS) (Chr. Hansen) and sonicated for 5min at pH5.2. Sonicated set gels exhibited syneresis and were softer than respective controls. The mechanical treatment was adjusted to quantify visible particles (d≥0.9mm) in stirred yogurts properly. Sonication significantly increased particle numbers, however, the effect was less pronounced when YF-L 901 was used, indicating EPS as a tool to reduce syneresis and particle formation due to vibrations. Rheological parameters and size of microgel particles were rather influenced by starter cultures than by sonication.


Journal of Dairy Science | 2018

Vibration-induced particle formation during yogurt fermentation—Effect of frequency and amplitude

Adrian Körzendörfer; Philipp Temme; Eberhard Schlücker; Jörg Hinrichs; Stefan Nöbel

Machinery such as pumps used for the commercial production of fermented milk products cause vibrations that can spread to the fermentation tanks. During fermentation, such vibrations can disturb the gelation of milk proteins by causing texture defects including lumpiness and syneresis. To study the effect of vibrations on yogurt structure systematically, an experimental setup was developed consisting of a vibration exciter to generate defined vibrational states and accelerometers for monitoring. During the fermentation of skim milk, vibrations (frequency sweep: 25 to 1,005 Hz) were introduced at different pH (5.7 to 5.1, step width 0.1 units) for 200 s. Physical properties of set gels (syneresis, firmness) and resultant stirred yogurts (visible particles, rheology, laser diffraction) were analyzed. Vibrational treatments at pH 5.5 to 5.2 increased syneresis, gel firmness, and the number of large particles (d > 0.9 mm); hence, this period was considered critical. The particle number increased from 34 ± 5 to 242 ± 16 particles per 100 g of yogurt due to vibrations at pH 5.4. In further experiments, yogurts were excited with fixed frequencies (30, 300, and 1,000 Hz). All treatments increased syneresis, firmness, and particle formation. As the strongest effect was observed by applying 30 Hz, the amplitude was set to vibration accelerations of a = 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 m/s2 in the final experiments. The number of large particles was increased due to each treatment and a positive correlation with the amplitude was found. We concluded that vibrations during gelation increase the collision probability of aggregating milk proteins, resulting in a compressed set gel with syneresis. Resultant stirred yogurts exhibit large particles with a compact structure leading to a reduced water-holding capacity and product viscosity.


Dairy Science & Technology | 2012

Post-processing of concentrated fermented milk: influence of temperature and holding time on the formation of particle clusters

Christian Hahn; Martin Sramek; Stefan Nöbel; Jörg Hinrichs


International Dairy Journal | 2012

Graininess in fresh cheese as affected by post-processing: Influence of tempering and mechanical treatment

Christian Hahn; Thomas Wachter; Stefan Nöbel; Jochen Weiss; Hermann Eibel; Jörg Hinrichs


Trends in Food Science and Technology | 2016

Post-processing of fermented milk to stirred products: Reviewing the effects on gel structure

Aryama Mokoonlall; Stefan Nöbel; Jörg Hinrichs


Food Hydrocolloids | 2015

Adjusting rheological properties of concentrated microgel suspensions by particle size distribution

Christian Hahn; Stefan Nöbel; Ramona Maisch; Wiebke Rösingh; Jochen Weiss; Jörg Hinrichs


International Dairy Journal | 2014

Rheological properties of microgel suspensions: Viscoelastic modelling of microstructural elements from casein micelles to fermented dairy products

Stefan Nöbel; Christian Hahn; Bernd Hitzmann; Jörg Hinrichs


Journal of Food Engineering | 2016

Microgel particle formation in yogurt as influenced by sonication during fermentation

Stefan Nöbel; Nina-Luise Ross; Kristin Protte; Adrian Körzendörfer; Bernd Hitzmann; Jörg Hinrichs

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Jochen Weiss

University of Hohenheim

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Alina Sonne

University of Hohenheim

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Anisa Loewen

University of Hohenheim

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Eberhard Schlücker

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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