The rheology of chocolate making

 · Invited

Abstract

The mixing of a powder of 10- to 50-μm primary particles into a liquid to form a dispersion with the highest possible solid content is a common industrial operation. Building on recent advances in the rheology of such “granular dispersions,” we study a paradigmatic example of such powder incorporation: the conching of chocolate, in which a homogeneous, flowing suspension is prepared from an inhomogeneous mixture of particulates, triglyceride oil, and dispersants. Studying the rheology of a simplified formulation, we find that the input of mechanical energy and staged addition of surfactants combine to effect a considerable shift in the frictional jamming volume fraction of the system, thus increasing the maximum flowable solid content. We discuss the possible microscopic origins of this shift, and suggest that chocolate conching exemplifies a ubiquitous class of powder–liquid mixing.

*We thank Mars Chocolate UK Ltd. for initiating and funding part of this work. Other funding came from Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Grants EP/J007404/1 and EP/N025318/1. Research at New York University was supported partially by the Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers Program of the National Science Foundation under Award DMR-1420073.

Presenters

  • Wilson Poon

    • Univ of Edinburgh
    • University of Edinburgh
    • The University of Edinburgh

Authors

  • Elena Blanco

    • University of Edinburgh
  • Daniel Hodgson

    • University of Edinburgh
  • Michiel Hermes

    • University of Edinburgh
  • Rut Besseling

    • University of Edinburgh
  • Gary L Hunter

    • New York University
  • Paul M Chaikin

    • Center for Soft Matter Research, New York University
    • New York Univ NYU
    • Physics, New York University
    • New York University
  • Michael Cates

    • University of Edinburgh
  • Isabella Van Damme

    • Mars Chocolate UK Ltd
  • Wilson Poon

    • Univ of Edinburgh
    • University of Edinburgh
    • The University of Edinburgh