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Conditioning of Tobacco and Tobacco Products: The Effect of Forced Air Flow Cover

Conditioning of Tobacco and Tobacco Products: The Effect of Forced Air Flow

Open Access
|Jun 2019

Abstract

Conditioning is a very important procedure for tobacco and tobacco products before their corresponding chemical and physical analysis. For cigarettes, forced air flow is generally required during the conditioning procedure. A special wind tunnel was designed to investigate how the forced air flow affects the conditioning of cigarettes in a constant climate laboratory. Two types of cigarettes with blended (including flue-cured and burley tobacco strands) and pure flue-cured tobacco strands were selected as test samples. It was found that the conditioning time to achieve the equilibrium could be shortened from 23 h without forced air flow to 7 h with a forced air flow rate of 2m/s. This is mainly due to the exchange of water molecules between cigarette samples and atmosphere being accelerated by applying the forced air flow. It was concluded that a 48 h conditioning period using the described forced air flow rate setup was unnecessary to attain the equilibrium for cigarettes. [Beitr. Tabakforsch. Int. 28 (2019) 224–229]

Language: English
Page range: 224 - 229
Submitted on: Dec 3, 2018
Accepted on: May 20, 2019
Published on: Jun 13, 2019
Published by: Institut für Tabakforschung GmbH
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2019 Zhihao Chen, Qian Miao, Jijun Zhao, Li Ding, Yan Xiao, Huiping Wang, Yunhua Qin, Wen Xiong, Hong Tao, Yu Wang, Xiaodong Lv, Qian Feng, published by Institut für Tabakforschung GmbH
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.