Energy-Qualitative and Sustainable Impacts on Differents Soy Grain Drying Technologies

Coradi, Paulo Carteri and Daí, Paulo Vinícius Silva and Oliveira, Marília Boff de and Carneiro, Letícia de Oliveira and Steinhaus, Jonatas Ibagé and Coelho, Guilherme Abreu and Müller, Amanda and Jaques, Lanes Beatriz Acosta and Bellochio, Sabrina Dalla Corte and Lutz, Éverton and Maldaner, Vanessa and Nunes, Marcela Trojahn and Padia, Claudir Lari and Dutra, Arthur Pozzobon and Timm, Newiton da Silva (2020) Energy-Qualitative and Sustainable Impacts on Differents Soy Grain Drying Technologies. Journal of Agricultural Science, 12 (6). p. 109. ISSN 1916-9752

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Abstract

The objective of this current paper is to evaluate, in real production scale, the management of soybean batches in the storage unit of harvested grains that are submitted to drying processes with different technologies, such an evaluation can contribute to minimizing energy and qualitative losses, and to ensuring the grain quality and sustainability of the postharvest system. The experiment was realized in full-scale production and the treatments utilized were lots moist soybean crop (SUL), RR dry soybean (SSLRR), RR2 dry soybean (SSLRR2), dried soybean in continuous dryer (SSS1) (11.0%), dried soybean silo-dryer (SSS2) (12.5%), dried soybean in silo aerator (SSS3) (14.0%). Energy losses and grain quality as a function of drying management ranged from 2.5 to 16.4% in energy, from 0.23 to 3.26% in crude protein and 0.15 to 3.05% in oil—the maximum yield of wet soybeans harvested from the crop (SUL) at 17% (w.b.). Considering the annual Brazilian soybean production, energy losses reach up to 162,282.50 m³ of firewood, approximately 2,116,963,470 kg of crude protein and 810,616,800 liters of crude oil. This would ensure lower losses and higher grain quality, including better yield of protein and crude oil, specifically reducing energy impacts by increasing the efficiency of the drying system. The current study concluded that the SSS1 drying system reduces energy-environmental impacts by 80.23%, reduces crude protein losses by 94.73%, and crude oil by 95.08%.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Digital > Agricultural and Food Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmdigital.org
Date Deposited: 10 May 2023 09:26
Last Modified: 19 Sep 2024 09:50
URI: http://research.asianarticleeprint.com/id/eprint/790

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