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Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment

The need for food size reduction before consumption has led to the use of motorized grinding machine which operates on energized rubbing of two grooved cast-iron discs, and this unintentionally results in tribological degradation and corrosion of grinding discs into the ground food. The objective of...

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Autores principales: Ahmed, Ismaila Idowu, Adediran, Adeolu Adesoji, Yahya, Raheem Abolore, Yahaya, Taiwo, Talabi, Segun Isaac, Adebisi, Jeleel Adekunle, Mahamood, Rasheedat Modupe, Odusote, Jamiu Kolawole, Sulaiman, Mariam Kehinde, Olatunji, Lawrence Aderemi, Abdulkareem, Sulaiman
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37790958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20523
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author Ahmed, Ismaila Idowu
Adediran, Adeolu Adesoji
Yahya, Raheem Abolore
Yahaya, Taiwo
Talabi, Segun Isaac
Adebisi, Jeleel Adekunle
Mahamood, Rasheedat Modupe
Odusote, Jamiu Kolawole
Sulaiman, Mariam Kehinde
Olatunji, Lawrence Aderemi
Abdulkareem, Sulaiman
author_facet Ahmed, Ismaila Idowu
Adediran, Adeolu Adesoji
Yahya, Raheem Abolore
Yahaya, Taiwo
Talabi, Segun Isaac
Adebisi, Jeleel Adekunle
Mahamood, Rasheedat Modupe
Odusote, Jamiu Kolawole
Sulaiman, Mariam Kehinde
Olatunji, Lawrence Aderemi
Abdulkareem, Sulaiman
author_sort Ahmed, Ismaila Idowu
collection PubMed
description The need for food size reduction before consumption has led to the use of motorized grinding machine which operates on energized rubbing of two grooved cast-iron discs, and this unintentionally results in tribological degradation and corrosion of grinding discs into the ground food. The objective of this study was to carry out an assessment of corrosion susceptibility of grinding discs from different manufacturing methods in simulated gastro-intestinal environment. Six grinding discs from three states in Nigeria were selected for this study, based on manufacturing methods namely: rotary, cupola, and pit furnaces. Experimental techniques used for the study included: X-Ray Fluorescence spectroscope for determination of chemical composition and X-Ray Diffractometer was used for phase identification. Corrosion susceptibility of grinding discs on interaction with pseudo-body fluid was studied using potentiodynamic polarization scan and product analysis (gasometric) methods in simulated gastro-intestinal environment, typical of human stomach, as electrolyte. The electrolyte contained 2 g/L NaCl acidified to pH of 1.7 with HCl and regulated at 37 °C. Optical microscopy of the electrochemical samples was done for corrosion damage assessment. The key finding from the study was that all the grinding discs contain iron and silicon as dominant alloy elements, which existed predominantly as iron carbide and ferrosilicon phases. Corrosion of the discs in simulated gastric solution was well profound irrespective of the manufacturing method, though, with varying degree among the discs. The outcome of this study is applicable to food industries where cognitive measures may have to be taken on materials selection to minimise the risk of food contamination from materials corrosion.
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spelling pubmed-105432022023-10-03 Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment Ahmed, Ismaila Idowu Adediran, Adeolu Adesoji Yahya, Raheem Abolore Yahaya, Taiwo Talabi, Segun Isaac Adebisi, Jeleel Adekunle Mahamood, Rasheedat Modupe Odusote, Jamiu Kolawole Sulaiman, Mariam Kehinde Olatunji, Lawrence Aderemi Abdulkareem, Sulaiman Heliyon Research Article The need for food size reduction before consumption has led to the use of motorized grinding machine which operates on energized rubbing of two grooved cast-iron discs, and this unintentionally results in tribological degradation and corrosion of grinding discs into the ground food. The objective of this study was to carry out an assessment of corrosion susceptibility of grinding discs from different manufacturing methods in simulated gastro-intestinal environment. Six grinding discs from three states in Nigeria were selected for this study, based on manufacturing methods namely: rotary, cupola, and pit furnaces. Experimental techniques used for the study included: X-Ray Fluorescence spectroscope for determination of chemical composition and X-Ray Diffractometer was used for phase identification. Corrosion susceptibility of grinding discs on interaction with pseudo-body fluid was studied using potentiodynamic polarization scan and product analysis (gasometric) methods in simulated gastro-intestinal environment, typical of human stomach, as electrolyte. The electrolyte contained 2 g/L NaCl acidified to pH of 1.7 with HCl and regulated at 37 °C. Optical microscopy of the electrochemical samples was done for corrosion damage assessment. The key finding from the study was that all the grinding discs contain iron and silicon as dominant alloy elements, which existed predominantly as iron carbide and ferrosilicon phases. Corrosion of the discs in simulated gastric solution was well profound irrespective of the manufacturing method, though, with varying degree among the discs. The outcome of this study is applicable to food industries where cognitive measures may have to be taken on materials selection to minimise the risk of food contamination from materials corrosion. Elsevier 2023-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10543202/ /pubmed/37790958 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20523 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Ahmed, Ismaila Idowu
Adediran, Adeolu Adesoji
Yahya, Raheem Abolore
Yahaya, Taiwo
Talabi, Segun Isaac
Adebisi, Jeleel Adekunle
Mahamood, Rasheedat Modupe
Odusote, Jamiu Kolawole
Sulaiman, Mariam Kehinde
Olatunji, Lawrence Aderemi
Abdulkareem, Sulaiman
Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment
title Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment
title_full Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment
title_fullStr Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment
title_full_unstemmed Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment
title_short Corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment
title_sort corrosion of food grinding discs in gastro-intestinal environment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37790958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20523
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