Study of the Soaking Process of a ready-to-eat rice of Assam (Komal Chaul): A Mechanistic and a Machine Learning Based Approach for spectra-based Estimation of Endpoint
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This research article focuses on two approaches to study the hydration behavior of a low amylose rice of Assam for the manufacture of a no-cooking rice known as Komal Chaul. Fick’s second law was used to study the diffusion of water during the soaking of brown Chokuwa rice. A machine learning (ML) approach to calibrate NIR spectral data with moisture values. ML models like PCR, and PLS were used for regression, and classification models like Logistic Regression, Linear Discriminant Analysis, K-Nearest Neighbors, Classification and Regression Tree, Naïve Bayes, Support Vector Machines, and Random Forest Classifiers were used. The concentration-dependent diffusion coefficients as estimated by applying Fick’s model were found to lie within the range of 2.83 ×10-11 m2/s - 7.92 ×10-11 m2/s. The ML regression models didn’t work well however, the spectral data endpoint classification on a target moisture value of 30% during soaking showed that the Random Forest (RF) classifier predicted the best with classification accuracy close to 0.90. Mechanistic models help us understand the physical phenomenon and the advancement of numerical tools and concepts of digital twins for process operations have led to the use of a sensor-based approach.
期刊介绍:
Biophysical studies of foods and agricultural products involve research at the interface of chemistry, biology, and engineering, as well as the new interdisciplinary areas of materials science and nanotechnology. Such studies include but are certainly not limited to research in the following areas: the structure of food molecules, biopolymers, and biomaterials on the molecular, microscopic, and mesoscopic scales; the molecular basis of structure generation and maintenance in specific foods, feeds, food processing operations, and agricultural products; the mechanisms of microbial growth, death and antimicrobial action; structure/function relationships in food and agricultural biopolymers; novel biophysical techniques (spectroscopic, microscopic, thermal, rheological, etc.) for structural and dynamical characterization of food and agricultural materials and products; the properties of amorphous biomaterials and their influence on chemical reaction rate, microbial growth, or sensory properties; and molecular mechanisms of taste and smell.
A hallmark of such research is a dependence on various methods of instrumental analysis that provide information on the molecular level, on various physical and chemical theories used to understand the interrelations among biological molecules, and an attempt to relate macroscopic chemical and physical properties and biological functions to the molecular structure and microscopic organization of the biological material.