1 / 34

Corn Storage and Drying – Spring 2009

Corn Storage and Drying – Spring 2009. Kenneth Hellevang, Ph.D., P.E. Professor & Extension Engineer Agricultural & Biosystems Engineering NDSU Extension Service. Corn Flowability. 28% moisture freezes together 24% - 25% some binding <24% to assure flow Foreign material affects flow.

craigf
Download Presentation

Corn Storage and Drying – Spring 2009

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Corn Storage and Drying – Spring 2009 Kenneth Hellevang, Ph.D., P.E. Professor & Extension Engineer Agricultural & Biosystems Engineering NDSU Extension Service

  2. Corn Flowability • 28% moisture freezes together • 24% - 25% some binding • <24% to assure flow • Foreign material affects flow

  3. Grain Hazards Bridging transfers load to the bin wall CAUGHT IN THE GRAIN! AE-1102

  4. Moldy Grain Health Hazard At least a N-95 rating

  5. 26% - 30% Moisture Corn • 28% corn @ 40°F AST = 30 days • Pile so can mechanically load • Aerate • High temperature dry by late February

  6. Holding 22% - 25% Corn • Cool to 20°F • High temperature dry by early March • Deterioration in early spring (AST)

  7. Grain Temperature Average Maximum Temp. February 1 - 15° March 1 - 27° April 1 - 45° May 1 - 65° Solar Radiation (Btu/ft2-day) Wall Roof Feb. 21 1725 1800 Jun. 21 800 2425 Periodically Cool Keep under 30°F

  8. Cable Temperature sensor Temperature indicator Fan Senses only grain near cable

  9. “Approximate” Allowable Storage Time for Cereal Grains (Days)

  10. Cooling Time 15 / cfm/bu = hrs Example: 42’ diameter, 36 ft depth, Corn 3 hp. Axial Fan, 0.15 cfm/bu Cooling time = 100 hrs. Aeration Airflow Rate Selection

  11. Fans Off During Snow/Rain/Fog

  12. Condensation may freeze over vents when outside air temperatures are below freezing

  13. Cover Fans When Not Operating • Prevents spring warm-up • Keep snow & pests out • Keep damp air out

  14. Storability Cracked, broken, immature corn spoils easier • Monitor: • Temperature • Moisture • Insects

  15. Let Stand Over Winter • Spring (March) moisture content ≈19% • Field losses unknown • Snow accumulation 40”= 4” water

  16. Rewetting or Drying Corn Equilibrium Moisture Content March 25°F & 76% RH, April 42°F & 71% RH

  17. Air Drying • 21% Maximum moisture content • 1.0 cfm/bu minimum airflow rate • Cool to 20°F for winter storage • Start drying early April

  18. Minimum Recommended Airflow Rate For Natural Air Drying Corn Airflow Moisture RateContent (cfm/bu) (%) 1.00 21 1.25 22 1.5 23 2.0 24 2.3 25 Wilcke and Morey, University of Minnesota Bu-6577-E, 1995

  19. “Approximate” Allowable Storage Time for Cereal Grains (Days)

  20. Natural Air & Low Temperature Corn Drying Spring Drying

  21. Air Drying

  22. Fan Power Required Limit Corn Depth 42 ft diameter bin, corn 36 ft deep, 1.0 cfm/bu Fan = 180 hp, static pressure = 17-inches wg. Not feasible

  23. Fan Type Comparison Corn: 21 ft. diameter, 20 ft. deep, 10 hp fan

  24. High Temp. Dryer Management • High temperatures, fast drying, fast cooling creates stress cracks & broken kernels • High moisture increases scorching potential

  25. Energy Efficiency Tips Energy requirements of a conventional high temperature cross-flow dryer as a function of drying air temperature and airflow rate. (University of Nebraska, about 1970) • Use maximum drying temperature that does not damage the corn • Airflow of Dryer Types • Mixed Flow ~ 40 cfm/bu • Cross-Flow ~ 70-90 cfm/bu • Airflow rate affects drying rate • Vacuum Cooling

  26. Drying Energy Cost Estimation High Temperature Drying~210°F Assumes 2,500 Btu/lb water Propane cost / bu- point moisture = 0.022 x price/gal $ 0.033/bu-pt = 0.022 x $1.50/gal @ $1.50/gal propane, estimated propane cost to dry corn from 25% to 15% is $0.033/bu-pt x 10 pts = $0.33/bu.

  27. Estimate Propane Quantity Needed Propane gallons = 0.02 x bu. x point moisture Propane = 0.02 x 1,000 bu x 10 pts = 200 gallons

  28. Moisture Meter Error • Electronic meters more sensitive to outside of kernel • Measure moisture content • Place sample in sealed container for several hours (6-12 hrs) • Recheck moisture • Adjust for temperature

  29. Moisture Shrink(Weight loss due to moisture loss) Moisture Shrink (%) = Mo – Mf__ x 100 100 – Mf Example: Corn dried from 25% to 15% moisture Shrink%= 25% – 15%__ x 100 = 11.76% 100% – 15% Shrink Factors (% weight loss/percentage point moisture loss) Example: The moisture shrink drying corn from 25.5% to 15.5% is 10pts x 1.1834 = 11.8%

  30. Adjustment added to the corn wet-harvest test weight to obtain an expected test weight after drying to 15.5 percent moisture. Affected by: * Kernel Damage * Drying Temperature * Variety Normally ¼ to 1/3 lb/pt.

  31. Dryeration Dump hot, temper without airflow 4-6 hrs, cool, move to storage Increases dryer capacity 50%-75%, Reduces energy by about 25%

  32. In-Storage Cooling Immediately cool, Airflow rate  12 cfm/bu-hr of fill rate Reduce condensation by partial cooling in the dryer

  33. For More Information http://www.ag.ndsu.nodak.edu/abeng Google: NDSU Corn Drying

More Related