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Design, Fabrication and Performance Evaluation of Domestic Gas Oven
Design, Fabrication and Performance Evaluation of Domestic Gas Oven
org
ISSN (e): 2250-3021, ISSN (p): 2278-8719
Vol. 04, Issue 05 (May. 2014), ||V5|| PP 35-38
Abstract: - A study, to design, fabricate and performance evaluation of the domestic gas oven was carried. The
oven was designed and was fabricated with an outer dimension of 450 mm length 350 mm width 380 mm
height made up stainless steel and the inner dimension of 380 mm length 310 mm width 340 mm height
made up of aluminum sheet and silicone rubber and asbestos used as an insulator. The gas burner was fixed in
the stand for baking and the deflector plate placed in the bottom of the baking chamber and the bimetallic
thermometer was fixed in the oven and provided with the vent for the removal of humid air. The oven was tested
in order to determine its function the model works on natural convection. The effectiveness was analyzed by
baking cake, cookies and muffins. Results showed that the cake was baked in 28 min at a temperature of 180C
it depends on the size of the cake, cookies took 10 min at a temperature of 150C and the muffins were baked in
13min at a temperature of 180C showing higher energy efficiency by reducing the energy, cost and the time of
baking.
I. INTRODUCTION
Baking is the oldest and most popular food processing techniques that uses the prolonged dry heat by
convection rather that the thermal radiation normally in an oven, but also in ashes or on hot stones. It is a
complex simultaneous heat and mass transfer process commonly applied in food industries.
A baking oven is the most widely used appliance in food service industry. An oven can be simply
described as a fully enclosed thermally insulated chamber use for the heating, baking or drying of a substance.
In a baking oven, the hot air flows over the baking material either by natural convection or forced by a fan, the
convection heat transfer from the air, the radiation heat transfer from the oven heating surfaces, and the
conduction heat transfer across contact area between product and metal surface. The moisture in the food
material simultaneously diffuses toward the surfaces, then, it transfers from the surface by convection, and the
product loses moisture with continuous movement of the oven ambient air. These are the simultaneous
momentum, heat and moisture transfer mechanisms within a baking product (Tong and Lund 1990; Ozilgen
and Heil 1994) and between the product and its environment (Carvalho and Martins 1993), which
theoretically are well known. Commercially, ovens are available in the various configurations like electric
ovens, micro oven and wood oven etc.
Electric ovens are the direct fired oven, which effectively distribute heat while being powered by
electricity, although this can often result in a higher heating cost for the consumer. Many prefer this type of oven
because they tend to use dry heat, which helps prevent the buildup of rust. Electric ovens also feature a
thermostat that controls the ovens temperature electronically, and many have top, bottom, or rear grill elements.
Electric ovens can take longer to heat, but they are relatively inexpensive in cost compared to other types of
ovens.
Wood-fired ovens are indirectly fired ovens that use wood fuel for cooking. While the traditional
wood-fired oven is like a masonry oven (mud oven), such ovens can also be built out of cob or iron. Wood-fired
ovens are distinct from wood-fired stoves that have a hot cooking surface for pots and pans like electric stove. A
wood stove may also have an oven separate from the fire chamber. Regardless of material they all have an oven
chamber consisting of a floor (or hearth), a dome and an entry (oven opening). The wood fired oven has an
advantage of the less capital requirement, ease of construction and similarly the wood fired has the disadvantage
International organization of Scientific Research 35 | P a g e
Design, Fabrication and Performance Evaluation of Domestic Gas Oven
of longer baking time, the product has not baked uniformly and has the problem of the changing the original
flavor of the product.
Gas oven one of the first recorded uses of a gas stove and oven referenced a dinner party in 1802
hosted by Zachaus Winzler, where all the food was prepared either on a gas stove or in its oven compartment. In
1834, British inventor James Sharp began to commercially produce gas ovens after installing one in his own
house. In 1851, the Bower's Registered Gas Stove was displayed at the Great Exhibition. This stove would set
the standard and basis for the modern gas oven. Notable improvements to the gas stove since include the
addition of the thermostat which assisted in temperature regulation; also an enamel coating was added to the
production of gas stoves and ovens in order to help with easier cleaning.
Gas oven is one which works by the liquefied petroleum gas for the baking of the bread, cake and
biscuit.The major operational principle of the gas oven is the process of heat transfer. Heat transfer tends to
occur whenever there is a temperature difference, and the ways in which heat may be transferred in the gas oven
that is convection.
Convection is the transfer of energy from one place to another by the motion of a mass of materials
between the two points. In a natural convection, the motion of the fluid is entirely as a result of differences in
density resulting from temperature differences. Naturally, convection occurs when a solid surface is in contact
with a fluid of different temperature from a surface. Density differences provide the force required to move the
fluid (moisture) in the food.
In the oven, the fluid involved is the enclosed air and the burner surface, which provides the solid
surface, while the oven walls serve as the solid surfaces. The rate at which heat is transferred across an enclosed
oven is calculated from a coefficient based upon the temperature differences of the surfaces.
Study of baking oven is important because it could lead to a more efficient process of baking favorable to
energy efficiency and better product quality (Fellows, 2000). The baking process usually requires significant
energy consumption as relatively high temperature is applied in order to remove moisture in bakery products
and create desired texture. Analysis and optimization of baking process and equipment have been conducted for
minimizing energy consumption (Therdthai et al., 2003).
In recent days the electric oven users are facing a problem due to the erratic power cuts in middle of the
operations, these causes the loss of the quality of the end product and the loss of the capital and the electric oven
consumes a more energy. The use of gas as the energy source for baking oven is a commercial necessary in most
of the regions because the electricity by comparison is prohibitively expensive. So the present study was carried
with the following objectives.
1. To design and fabricate a domestic gas oven.
2. To study the performance evaluation of the designed gas oven.
IV. CONCLUSION
From this study it is evidently clear that the designed gas oven can be better used for the baking of the
cakes, cookies and all the bakery products with good quality parameters like color, texture and the taste and
good volume in the fermented products and also the pre heating time of the gas oven was also reduced this in
turn consumes very less energy and the time of the baking and reduces the overall working cost. This can be
used for small entrepreneurs and can be popularized in areas where power cuts are more frequent and power is
available for limited hours. This gas oven having the disadvantage of the controlling the temperature inside the
baking chamber.
V. ACKNOWLEDGMENT
I express my deep sense of gratitude to my department staff and SHIATS for providing all facilities for my
work. I am thankful to my friend Abdul Suhel, student M.Tech Agricultural Engineering, SHIATS for helping
me throughout this work.
REFERENCES
[1] Tong, C.H., Lund, D.B., 1990. Effective moisture diffusivity in porous materials as a function of
temperature and moisture content. Biotechnology Progress 6, 6775.
[2] Ozilgen, M., Heil, J.R., 1994. Mathematical modelling of transient heat and mass transport in a baking
process. Journal of Food Processing and Preservation 18, 133148.
[3] Carvalho, M. and Martins, N., 1993. Mathematical modelling of heat and mass transfer in a forced
convection baking oven. AICHE Symposium Series Heat Transfer 88 (288), 205211.
[4] Fellows, P.J., (2000). Food Processing Technology-Principles and Practice. Wood head Publishing
Limited, Cambridge.
[5] Therdthai Nantawan, Zhou Weibiao and Thomas Adamczak, 2003. Three-dimensional CFD modelling
and simulation of the temperature profiles and airflow patterns during a continuous industrial baking
process. Journal of Food Engineering 65, 599608.