1. Introduction
The estimated global population growth tends to put pressure on food production worldwide. This production is supposed to increase by 60% by 2050, compared to the 2005–2007 period; however, a large amount of food is lost and wasted. While most of the waste (at the end of the chain) occurs in developed countries, the losses (at crop management and post-harvest stages) are more common in developing countries—Accounting for as much as 28% in Latin America according to FAO. With global food loss estimated to be a third of production, or 1.8 billion tons [
1,
2] per year, prioritizing loss prevention along the production chain will become an increasingly necessary and productive industry.
It has been reported that, in East Asia, food waste ranges from 10% to 50%, and in Africa, it reaches up to 80% [
3]. In India, in one year, losses range from 30% to 35% and occur in the harvesting, storage, classification, transport, packaging, and distribution phases, with only 2% becoming value-added products [
4]. In Zimbabwe, it was reported that the losses of sweet potatoes could reach 60% of post-harvested production [
5]. In turn, in Bangladesh, the post-harvest loss rate of tomatoes and eggplant is 26%, while the average daily consumption of fruits and vegetables is one-third of the FAO recommendation [
6].
Considering the importance of the use of green energy for African countries [
7], as well as for other developing countries, and increase the use of such green energy in direct energy transformation (solar to heat, for instance) resulting and lower investment and higher efficiency, among several ways of combating food loss recommended by the FAO, evaporative coolers (EC), also called cooler chambers, stand out as one of the mitigation factors due to their simplicity and low cost. They are one of the oldest methods of food preservation and work through a thermo-dynamic process of air called adiabatic saturation [
8], consisting of food storage spaces that are cooled by the circulation of moist air, which can occur directly (wet wrap), indirectly (receives cooled air) or both, and depends on a hot and dry climate so that there is water evaporation [
8]. These devices can decrease rapid food deterioration, allowing it to be consumed or sold for a longer period.
Researchers from Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI), India, developed a metallic direct EC to compare its performance with a similar size indirect EC created by Habibunnisa et al. Both types reduced physiological losses, increasing the shelf life of fruits [
9].
A ceramic pot inside another ceramic pot, filled with wet sand and a lid, is an indirect EC. With the same principle, S. K. Roy and partners initiated the Zero Energy Cool Chamber—ZECC series, at Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), India, during the 1980s [
10]. This model is ceramic, double-walled brick on a foundation also made of ceramic bricks. The cavity between walls is filled with sand to serve as a wet pad. A lid made of timber/bamboo culms and straw is built to cover the box to keep the air inside cool and humid. The ZECC became the main reference of much contemporary research related to ECs. The 1982 model lowered temperature (inner: 23–26.5 °C and ambient: 24.2–39.1 °C) and increased humidity (inner: 94–97% and ambient 9–36%) during the summer [
4]. The subsequent works and models that were developed by the same authors and others showed similar behavior: humidity rise (more than 90%) and temperature fall (10–15 °C) compared to the ambient condition by watering the EC twice or three times a day. Many studies reported a prolonged shelf life of days or even for a few months, but the most frequent outcome is an increased shelf life of 1 or 2 weeks, making the EC suitable for short-term vegetable storage [
4,
6,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16].
The indicators usually used to measure the performance of an EC include physiological weight loss, color preservation, firmness, extended shelf life, decay incidence, visual quality, and nutritious parameters [
14,
15,
17,
18]. For no-load tests, the main indicators for performance evaluation include temperature, humidity, and saturation efficiency [
19]. The saturation efficiency, in turn, depends upon the shape and materials of the EC and the weather (inlet air temperature, relative humidity, air movement). A study of four materials in three different shapes of ECs determined a saturation efficiency between 89 and 91% [
8]. A study reported a drop in temperature of 20 °C temperature under specific conditions, near 23.5 °C (wet bulb temperature), very close to maximum efficiency [
20].
ECs are a particularly suitable option for farmers and communities in dry, hot, and remote locations of the developing world, where widespread use of electrical coolers, based as they are upon the compression and expansion cycle of an active refrigerant, is made impossible by the scarcity, or the absence, of a reliable power source. Hence, the opportunity to produce ECs with free, local materials and to substitute industrialized materials for a labor-intensive artisanal process should be given serious consideration. This would add other indicators to evaluate the success/ability of an EC to attend to the circumstances, such as water requirement, cost, storage volume capacity, free local materials content, and durability. Water, needed daily for proper functioning, is a special requirement that must be readily available.
This paper proposes a walk-in size indirect evaporative cooler for post-harvesting preservation of community-scale horticultural farm production. Its design is based on the use of local materials and local construction techniques aiming for low environmental impact and low cost. Next, a brief overview of cooler chambers, their operation principles, and performance indicators are presented. In sequence are shown the design and implementation of a full-scale unit, the analysis of its results, and performance evaluation, followed by concluding remarks.
5. Conclusions
This work presented the Cerrado Cooler Chamber, a community-scale evaporative cooler designed and implemented based on an appropriate technology framework and aligned with the SDGs. It was constructed using cement-stabilized adobes, therefore massively based on earth, a locally available natural resource. Besides being low cost and durable, it is also humidity resistant, with an expected long useful life span. Furthermore, adobe masonry is a vernacular building construction system which is very familiar to rural communities in many countries. It exempts expensive tools, can be made on-site using a few diversities of industrialized materials, and is easy to understand, so 3C can be easily replicated.
The resulting temperatures are insufficient to prevent fruit and vegetables from ripening but can avoid losses and damages from temperatures above 30 °C [
39]. The lower temperatures combined with high humidity can increase shelf life [
4,
6,
11,
12,
13,
14,
17,
23]. Furthermore, the designed cooler has the potential to be more effective in dryer and hotter climates.
The Cerrado Cooler has around 8 m3 (2.10 m × 2.10 m × 2.20 m) and can preserve a load of 1.1 tons of food. Its cost is about 27% of the average cost of other evaporative coolers reported in the literature, i.e., it costs U% 0.27 cents per kilogram, while the average is U$1.00. The efficiency ranges from 62% to 73%, which is a little smaller than the presented in the literature, but still at a considerably high level. Since the 3C could not be tested for different watering volumes, maintaining the same outside temperature and humidity, a fair comparison could not be made to find the optimum volume of water. The 3C is being modeled aiming at watering volume optimization, and results will be presented in future work. Summing up, the 3C is low-cost, easy to implement, fairly efficient, ready to be deployed, and fully capable of fulfilling the mission of an evaporative cooler.