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Featured researches published by Zhongyuan Zhang.


Ultrasonics Sonochemistry | 2017

Low intensity ultrasound as a pretreatment to drying of daylilies: Impact on enzyme inactivation, color changes and nutrition quality parameters

Zhongyuan Zhang; Liying Niu; Dajing Li; Chunquan Liu; Rui Ma; Jiangfeng Song; Jiangtao Zhao

Effects of thermal and low intensity ultrasound combined with heat (LIUH) pretreatment prior to microwave vacuum drying on enzyme inactivation, color changes and nutrition quality properties of dried daylilies were investigated. The peroxidase (POD), ascorbic acid oxidase (AAO) and polyphenoloxidase (PPO) thermal and LIUH (0.2 and 0.4W/cm2) inactivation were determined and compared at 70, 80 and 90°C. Significant reduction in the POD, AAO and PPO activity was seen in daylilies after an ambient LIUH pretreatment than thermal pretreatment. POD, AAO and PPO thermal and LIUH inactivation followed the first order kinetics. LIUH pretreatment had a more positive influence on maintaining color of dried daylilies than thermal pretreatment. Furthermore, LIUH pretreatment resulted in a significant increase in chlorophylls, carotenoids (lutein, zeaxanthin and β-carotene), and a decrease in degree of browning and 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) when compared with thermal pretreatment. The antioxidant activity and contents of several nutritional components of dried daylilies pretreated by LIUH were also higher than that of dried daylilies pretreated by thermal pretreatment. This study provides a basis for the design of LIUH conditions to control vegetables browning and color changes prior to drying processing.


Drying Technology | 2016

Effects of ultrasound pretreatment on drying kinetics and quality parameters of button mushroom slices

Zhongyuan Zhang; Zongbo Liu; Chunju Liu; Dajing Li; Ning Jiang; Chunquan Liu

ABSTRACT The aim of this study was to investigate the utilization of ultrasound as a pretreatment method prior to drying to improve the quality of button mushroom slices during both hot air drying and far infrared drying processes. The effects of ultrasound and blanching pretreatments upon drying were analyzed. The ultrasound frequency was 40 kHz, the power was 0.4 W/cm2, and the ultrasound energy was applied for 3 and 10 min, respectively. The ultrasound treatment caused reduction of the drying time by 9.5% in comparison to untreated samples. The drying kinetics of button mushroom slices were improved by ultrasound application, which involved an improvement of mass transfer coefficient and effective moisture diffusivity. The logarithmic model showed the best fit to the experimental drying data. For ultrasound treated samples, the parameters including hardness, crispness, rehydration ability, shrinkage, microstructure, and nutrient composition had remarkable changes compared with blanched and untreated samples.


International Journal of Food Properties | 2016

Identification and Quantification of All-Trans-Zeaxanthin and Its Cis-Isomers During Illumination in a Model System

Zhongyuan Zhang; Yadong Xiao; Dajing Li; Chunquan Liu

The degradation and isomerization of all-trans-zeaxanthin in a model system during illumination, in the absence or presence of iodine, were investigated. A high-performance liquid chromatography method was developed using the C-30 column to separate all-trans-zeaxanthin and its cis-isomers. Three mono-cis-isomers and four di-cis-isomers were assigned by high-performance liquid chromatography-photo diode array detection-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (HPLC-DAD-APCI-MS), namely, 15/15’-cis-, 13/13’-cis-, 9/9’-cis-13,15-di-cis-, 9,15-di-cis-, 9,13-di-cis-, and 9,9’-di-cis-zeaxanthin. 13/13’-cis- and 9, 13-di-cis-zeaxanthin were the major cis-isomers of zeaxanthin formed during illumination. Di-cis-zeaxanthin was favored during illumination in the presence of iodine. The degradation of total amount of all-trans-zeaxanthin during illumination was found to fit a first-order model. The degradation rate of iodine-catalyzed photoisomerization of all-trans-zeaxanthin was faster than that of non-iodine-catalyzed photoisomerization. Isomerization and degradation of all-trans-zeaxanthin and its cis-isomers during illumination proceeded simultaneously.


International Journal of Food Properties | 2018

Dielectric properties of Agaricus bisporus slices relevant to drying with microwave energy

Ning Jiang; Chunquan Liu; Dajing Li; Camel Lagnika; Zhongyuan Zhang; Jiapeng Huang; Chunju Liu; Min Zhang; Zhifang Yu

ABSTRACT Dielectric properties of sliced Agaricus bisporus samples, with 0.16–0.89 [g/g, wet basis (w.b.)] moisture content, were determined using a network analyser and an open-ended coaxial-line probe, over a frequency range of 915 MHz to 2450 MHz and a temperature range of 25°C to 60°C. The results showed that the permittivity of A. bisporus was a function of frequency, moisture content, and temperature. The dielectric constant and loss factor were directly proportional to moisture content and temperature, respectively, and both decreased with increasing frequency. However, the influence of temperature on the dielectric constant showed a different trend, as this was affected by the moisture content of the sample. The dielectric loss factor initially increased and then decreased with the decrease in moisture content. Both inflection points appeared at the moisture content value of 0.69 (g/g, w.b.), which represents the “semi-bound water transfer” point. Third-degree polynomial models could be used to describe dielectric constant and loss factor values as functions of moisture content and temperature. The penetration depth decreased with increasing frequency and temperature; however, this first decreased with decreasing moisture content and then increased. Notably, the penetration depth was at a low ebb when the moisture content ranged from 0.69 to 0.52 (g/g, w.b.), indicating easier uneven drying. Low frequency (915 MHz) with large penetration depth represents a highly effective method for large-scale industrial dielectric microwave drying of A. bisporus slices from the angle of uniformity.


Drying Technology | 2018

Effects of different combined drying methods on drying uniformity and quality of dried taro slices

Qiuyu Wei; Jiapeng Huang; Zhongyuan Zhang; Dajing Lia; Chunquan Liu; Yadong Xiao; Camel Lagnika; Min Zhang

ABSTRACT In this study, hot air drying (HAD), low power intermittent microwave vacuum drying (LPIMVD), and high power intermittent microwave vacuum drying (HPIMVD) were combined to dry taro slices. Microwave-only drying showed the highest drying rate, but the worst drying uniformity. Combined HAD and microwave drying improved uniformity and quality (color, ascorbic acid content, texture) of dried products. Taro slices dried by HAD + HPIMVD + LPIMVD showed high L* value, ascorbic acid content, and suitable texture. Furthermore, the drying time was reduced by 62.5%, as compared to IMVD + HAD. For HAD + HPIMVD + LPIMVD, the surface moisture evaporated during the HAD process, this may contribute to improve texture of samples and uniformity of temperature distribution during the subsequent microwave.


Journal of Food Quality | 2017

Screening Quality Evaluation Factors of Freeze-Dried Peach (Prunus Persica L. Batsch) Powders from Different Ripening Time Cultivars

Chunju Liu; Hai-ou Wang; You-lin Xue; Zhongyuan Zhang; Liying Niu; Dajing Li; Ning Jiang; Li Cui; Chunquan Liu

The quality evaluation of processed products is complex. To simplify the quality evaluation process and improve the efficiency, fourteen evaluation factors of freeze-dried powders of seventeen cultivars of peach at different ripening times were analyzed. The most important evaluation indicators and criteria were obtained by analysis of variance (ANOVA), correlation analysis (CA), principal component analysis (PCA), system cluster analysis (SCA), and analytic hierarchy process (AHP). Results showed that the peach powders had the significant differences in quality ( ), and some processing factors were related with some physicochemical and nutritional factors. Five principle components were extracted by PCA and the cumulative contribution achieved was 84.46%. Through the score plot of the first two principal components, a clear differentiation among ripening times was found and three distinct groups were separated according to ripening time. Five characteristic factors were obtained as titratable acid, browning index, hemicellulose, hygroscopicity, and vitamin C by SCA. Their weights of 0.1249, 0.3007, 0.0514, 0.4916, and 0.0315 were obtained by AHP, respectively. The peach cultivars were divided into four evaluation grades by the comprehensive quality score.


Drying Technology | 2017

Comparison of four pretreatments on the drying behavior and quality of taro (Colocasia esculenta L. Schott) slices during intermittent microwave vacuum-assisted drying

Zhongyuan Zhang; Qiuyu Wei; Chunju Liu; Dajing Li; Chunquan Liu; Nin Jiang

ABSTRACT Effect of different pretreatments on drying behavior and quality of taro slices during intermittent microwave vacuum-assisted drying were investigated. Taro slices were subjected to the following pretreatments: blanching (B), blanching and freezing (B + F), blanching and immersion in maltodextrin solution (B + M), and blanching and immersion in maltodextrin solution and freezing (B + M + F). The reduction in amylose content, the increase in amylose to amylopectin ratio, the change of mechanical properties, the increase in sample bulk density and reduction in sample porosity and structure collapse during pretreatment processes facilitated heat and moisture transfer and quality changes during drying of taro slices. During drying process, all the pretreatment reduced the drying time of samples. The drying rate included a warming-up period and a falling rate period. The values of effective moisture diffusivity increased gradually as the moisture content decreased. The B + M + F pretreatment had the shortest drying time, the highest drying rate and the biggest effective moisture diffusivity. Moreover, for B + M + F pretreatment, the parameters including hardness, crispness, color, and microstructure had remarkable changes as compared with the other pretreatments.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2014

Analysis of (all-E)-lutein and its (Z)-isomers during illumination in a model system

Dajing Li; Yadong Xiao; Zhongyuan Zhang; Chunquan Liu


Journal of Food Engineering | 2016

Effect of thermosonic pretreatment on drying kinetics and energy consumption of microwave vacuum dried Agaricus bisporus slices

Ning Jiang; Chunquan Liu; Dajing Li; Zhongyuan Zhang; Zhifang Yu; Yongjun Zhou


Lwt - Food Science and Technology | 2017

Evaluation of freeze drying combined with microwave vacuum drying for functional okra snacks: Antioxidant properties, sensory quality, and energy consumption

Ning Jiang; Chunquan Liu; Dajing Li; Zhongyuan Zhang; Chunju Liu; Di Wang; Liying Niu; Min Zhang

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Dajing Li

Northeast Forestry University

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Ning Jiang

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Yadong Xiao

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Qiuyu Wei

Nanjing Normal University

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Zhifang Yu

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Meimei Nie

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Camel Lagnika

École Normale Supérieure

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Jiangfeng Song

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Zongbo Liu

Northeast Forestry University

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