FOOD SCIENCE ›› 2026, Vol. 47 ›› Issue (7): 251-261.doi: 10.7506/spkx1002-6630-20250916-128

• Food Engineering • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Effect of Freezing-Point Precooling Followed by Variable-Rate Liquid Nitrogen Freezing on the Quality of Fresh Monopterus albus Slices and Evaluation of Freezing Energy Consumption Characteristics

LIU Na, WANG Shuanglin, LIAO E, CHEN Jiwang, YANG Qian   

  1. (1. School of Food Science and Engineering, Wuhan Polytechnic University, Wuhan 430023, China;2. Hubei Key Laboratory for Processing and Transformation of Agricultural Products (Wuhan Polytechnic University), Wuhan 430023, China; 3. Hubei Xiantao Monopterus albus Processing Rural Revitalization Science and Technology Innovation Demonstration Base, Xiantao 433018, China; 4. Hubei Yuntaifang Food Co. Ltd., Xiantao 433018, China)
  • Online:2026-04-15 Published:2026-05-08

Abstract: To enhance the quality of liquid nitrogen-frozen fresh Monopterus albus fillets and reduce energy consumption costs, this study established a freezing rate versus temperature curve for liquid nitrogen freezing at various temperature gradients (–50 to –120 ℃), and investigated the effects of varying freezing rates on quality parameters of fresh M. albus, including water-holding capacity (moisture content, water-holding rate, and thawing loss), water state, textural properties, ice crystal morphology, and muscle tissue microstructure. On this basis, a “freezing-point precooling followed by variable-rate liquid nitrogen freezing” protocol (PC-V-LNF, precooling at −1.36 ℃ and then freezing at varying rates from 9 to 4 ℃/min) was developed, and its energy consumption characteristics were evaluated. The results demonstrated a linear relationship between liquid nitrogen freezing temperature and freezing rate (y = −3.668 6x − 43.082, R2 = 0.981). Compared with samples frozen at 6 ℃/min, the proportion of bound water (P21) in samples frozen at 9 ℃/min decreased by 19.00%, and the proportion of immobilized water (P22) increased 1.40%; the hardness and chewiness increased by 39.44% and 264.90%, respectively (P < 0.05), accompanied by reduced gaps between ice crystals and more compact arrangement of muscle fibers. As the freezing rate increased from 9 to 12 ℃/min, the chewiness decreased by 21.23% (P < 0.05), and the gaps between ice crystals slightly increased. Relative to freeze-frozen samples (FF, 0.38 ℃/min), the moisture content of samples subjected to constant-rate liquid nitrogen freezing (C-LNF, 9 ℃/min), variable-rate liquid nitrogen freezing (V-LNF, 9 → 4 ℃/min), or PC-V-LNF increased by 7.87%–10.90%, the water-holding rate increased by 11.36%–13.39%, and the thawing loss decreased by 27.60%–35.43% (P < 0.05). Notably, PC-V-LNF resulted in no significant differences in water-holding capacity, water state, hardness, springiness, chewiness, resilience, or muscle fiber integrity compared with C-LNF and V-LNF (P > 0.05). The evaluation results of energy consumption characteristics revealed that the liquid nitrogen consumption of C-LNF, V-LNF, and PC-V-LNF were 7 920, 6 712, and 5 233 L per ton of samples, respectively, with electricity consumption of 16.8, 14.4, and 2.52 kW·h, respectively. Compared with C-LNF and V-LNF, PC-V-LNF reduced liquid nitrogen consumption by 33.93% and 22.04% and lowered comprehensive cost by 34.02% and 22.15%, respectively. In conclusion, PC-V-LNF enhances freezing quality in fresh M. albus while significantly reducing energy costs, providing theoretical and technical support for the efficient liquid nitrogen quick-freezing preservation of fresh M. albus products.

Key words: fresh Monopterus albus; liquid nitrogen; freezing-point precooling; variable-rate freezing; freezing quality; energy consumption characteristics

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