2.1. Osmotic Dehydration Experiments
‘Fuji’ apples (Malus domestica Borkh) were purchased at a local grocery store, stored in a cold room at 1 °C, and used within one week. The apples were first cut into slices of 5 mm thickness with a slicer (Mliter, 150 W Electric Professional, Shenzhen, China). Then, a corer (14 mm diameter) was used to obtain disk samples (5 mm thickness and 14 mm diameter) from the slices and each disk weighed 0.937 ± 0.038 g.
Sucrose, glucose, fructose, and maltose were purchased from Fisher Scientific (Fisher, Waltham, MA, USA). Sucrose solution was prepared at 40% wt, 50% wt, and 60% wt, and glucose, fructose, and maltose solutions were prepared at 50% wt.
Osmotic dehydration was performed in an incubator shaker (I 24R Incubator shaker, New Brunswick Scientific Co., Inc., Edison, NJ, USA) at 40 °C, 200 rpm, and 1 atm [
2,
15]. Five apple slices with a total mass of 4.60 ± 0.115 g were placed in a 120 mL glass vessel with a lid (Qorpak™, Clinton, PA, USA). Different osmotic solutions (50 mL each) were added to the glass vessels to reach an apple to osmotic solution ratio of 1:10
w/
v, which was large enough to minimize the effect due to changes in solution concentration during OD [
15]. At the selected times (0.5 h, 1.0 h, 1.5 h, and 2.0 h), one glass vessel was removed from the shaker, and all the five apple slices in the vessel were removed from the osmotic solution, gently blotted to remove the solution on the surface, and weighted. The OD tests were terminated after 2 h because the water loss became insignificant thereafter. All the experiments were conducted in triplicate.
2.2. Osmotic Pressure in Multiple Solutes System
Sucrose, fructose, sodium chloride (NaCl), and calcium lactate (CaLac) were purchased from Fisher Scientific (Fisher, Waltham, MA, USA). Different concentrations of binary, ternary, and quaternary solutions were prepared for water activity measurement, and the choices of solute concentrations were determined according to the central composite design in the response surface method (RSM) using Design-Expert (Free trial, Stat-Ease, Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA). For sucrose and fructose, the concentration lower and upper limit levels were 35% wt and 55% wt, which were chosen according to the concentration of the most commonly used osmotic solutions [
15]. The concentration lower and upper limit levels of NaCl were set at 0.05% wt and 0.1% wt. The concentration lower and upper limit levels of CaLac were set at 1% wt and 2% wt. The concentration levels of both salts were determined according to their concentration in commercial beverage products [
18]. The concentration limit levels were applied as the input in RSM for generating concentration values in the following tests. The solutes were weighed using an analytical balance with a precision of 0.1 mg (AP210S, UHAUS, Parsippany, NJ, USA) and dissolved in distilled water. The studied osmotic systems are summarized in
Table 1. The solutions were kept at 40 °C in accordance with the most common temperature in OD process.
2.3. Water Activity
Water activity () of apples and osmotic solutions was measured using a water activity meter (AQUALAB 4TE, METER Group, Inc., Pullman, WA, USA) with the chamber temperature set at 40 °C, the same as the processing temperature of OD process. For liquid samples, the can be measured directly by pouring the sample into the sample pan of the water activity meter. For apple samples, the samples were chopped into small chips with a kitchen knife, and the chips were spread evenly in the sample dish. All the tests were conducted with triplicate samples, and triplicate tests were conducted on each sample.
2.4. Mass Transfer in Osmotic Dehydration
The moisture contents of the fresh and treated apples were determined by drying at 70 °C and 25-inch Hg vacuum pressure in a vacuum oven (Isotemp Vacuum Oven Model 281 A, Fisher, Waltham, MA, USA) for 24 h [
19]. Water loss (WL) is the net water loss in fresh samples (g water/g dry solid) after a certain time of osmotic treatment, and it can be calculated by the following equation:
where
and
are the weights of apple slices and moisture content in wet basis, respectively. The subscripts 0 and
t indicate the weight and moisture content of apple slices after 0 h and
t h osmotic dehydration, respectively. Solid gain (g solute/g dry solid) is the weight of the solutes that are absorbed into apple slices during osmotic dehydration. It can be expressed as:
Dehydration rate (g water/g dry weight/min) was calculated from
results with the following equations:
where,
and
were two consecutive sampling time, and
and
were water loss at
and
, respectively.
2.5. Osmotic Pressure
Osmotic pressure is defined as the difference of the pressure in two systems in equilibrium, one of which is often pure water, and under such a condition, the chemical potentials of the two systems are equal. The equilibrium of two systems defined by chemical potentials is shown in Equation (4).
where
and
is the standard chemical potentials of water in system
i and
j, respectively, which can be considered equal [
20],
is the partial molal volume of pure water (
= 0.018 L/mol),
is the hydrostatic pressure,
is the gas constant, and
is the water activity. When system
i is pure water, and system
j is either osmotic solution or apple tissue, the osmotic pressure of the osmotic solution and apple tissue can be given by Equations (7) and (6) (note
):
where superscripts
and
represent water in apple tissue and osmotic solution, respectively. Thus, the osmotic pressure difference
between the apple tissue and the osmotic solution can be written as:
It was pointed out in 1894 that osmotic pressure is not a function of the relationship of solute particles to solvent particles, but a function of the mole fraction of the solvent present [
19]. For dilute solutions, they can be considered as ideal solutions, and they will obey Raoult’s law, in which the partial vapor pressures are proportional to the mole fractions. Thus, the water activity can be substituted with the mole fraction of the solvent
in Equation (5).
The correlation of dehydration rate or solid gain and the between apple tissue and osmotic solutions were analyzed using the ORIGIN2021 software (Origin 2021b, OriginLab Corporation, Northampton, MA, USA). The correlation between osmotic pressure and solution concentration was also analyzed.
Hamdan et al. proposed the concept of synergistic factor (SF) to study the synergistic effect of a second solute on the osmotic pressure of ternary solutions [
16].
where
,
and
are the osmotic pressure of the ternary system, the osmotic pressure of solute 1 solution, and the osmotic pressure of solute 2 solution at corresponding concentrations, respectively. At
, the solution is an additive system. At
, the solution is a positive synergy system. At
, the solution is a negative synergy system.
Equations (5) and (8) were used for the osmotic pressure calculation of osmotic solutions in the study of
Section 2.1 and
Section 2.2. Equation (6) was used for the osmotic pressure calculation of apple tissues in the study of
Section 2.1. Equation (7) was used to calculate the osmotic pressure difference between apple tissue and osmotic solution in the study of
Section 2.1.