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Department of Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering |
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Natural
air grain drying cuts costs Natural air drying is an in-bin system with the following typical characteristics. The bin is equipped with f full perforated floor, one or more high capacity fans, a grain distributor and stairs. Fan size is selected based on 1 to 2 cfm/bu and air is unheated. Cleaning equipment is used remove broken kernels and fines. Initial shelled corn moisture content is generally 22 to 25% and drying time 4-8 weeks. Energy
can be saved If propane costs $1.60/gal and electricity is $0.12/kwh, the total energy cost for high speed, high temperature drying (both drying and cooling) would be abut $33 to dry a hundred bushels of corn from 25 to 15%. A similar system that cools in the storage bin would cost about $29. Natural air drying reduces the cost to about $17. The savings in this example is 12 to 16 cents per bushel. Airflow
is key to success Upward airflow is recommended. With upward airflow, the grain at the top of the bins is most critical since it is last to dry. Upward airflow allows the most critical grain to be visually checked by the operator. Airflow must be sufficient to move the drying front (boundary between dry grain and grain that is not yet dry) to the top of the grain before spoilage occurs. Generally, corn harvesting for natural-air drying should be delayed until October 15 in Ohio for two reason: 1) to take advantage of the free natural-air drying that occurs in the field, and 2) to reduce the probability of the occurrence of 60oF days after the corn is harvested, stored and not yet dry. As air temperature increases, the time available for drying decreases faster than the drying capacity of the air increases. The only alternative is to increase airflow rates. Airflow rates for natural-air drying are primarily controlled by fan size, grain type, bin diameter, and grain depth (Hansen et al., 1990). Practical ranges for fan size and energy requirements limit the airflow rate and also vary according to initial moisture content. Bin
Diameter and Grain Depth Fan
Selection OSU
Extension Bulletin 805 has more detailed information on the selection
and operation of natural air grain drying systems in Ohio. Contact your
county Extension office or me for a copy. Robert C. Hansen, FABE Adjunct Assistant Professor and Research Scientist, can be reached at 330-263-3860, or hansen.2@osu.edu
This column is provided by the OSU Department of Food, Agricultural, and Biological Engineering. |
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