B. Aliyu & E. K. Bwade
An attempt to minimize post-harvest losses of tomato that gluts in Mubi, Adamawa State, Nigeria in the months of August to October annually, an indirect solar dryer was designed, fabricated and evaluated based on meteorological data of mean monthly values of ambient temperature, wind speed, and global solar radiation, which were 22.2oC, 3.64 m/s, and 206W/m2 respectively. The designed dryer has a solar collector tilted at an angle of 20.26o to the horizontal with the air mass-flow rate and overall mean drying rate of 3.106 X 10-3kg/s and 0.140 kg/hr. It also had a lagging material of thickness 0.065m and an air volumetric flow rate of 0.115m3/s. Evaluation of the dryer revealed that within the studied months, the dryer requires 50.8 hours to dry tomato from a postharvest moisture content of 95.6% (d.b) to a storage moisture content of 15.8%(d.b). In the light of the tomato-fruit dryers developed and evaluated in other regions of the world, further researches need to investigate the effects of incorporating either an additional source of heat or a heat reservoir to ensure day and night time drying, which will further enhance the drying rate and consequently minimize drying duration.
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