Freeze-Dried Figs Case Study: 10㎡ Freeze Dryer in China
Customer Case Study · China · 2020

Freeze-Dried Figs Case Study

This freeze-dried figs case study shows how a Chinese food processor used an SDG350 10㎡ freeze dryer to process approximately 136 kg of half-cut figs per batch and complete drying in 13 hours.

10㎡ Drying Area 136 kg Figs/Batch Half-Cut Figs 13-Hour Drying Cycle 1.79% Final Moisture
13 h Time to dry
10㎡ Drying area
26–96 Pa Vacuum range
Drying Area 10㎡
Batch Load 136 kg
Drying Time 13 Hours
Final Moisture 1.79%
Energy Use 1.72 kWh/kg
Project Data

Quick Facts

This fig project used real production data instead of general marketing claims. The data helps fruit processors evaluate batch capacity, preparation method, drying time, vacuum range, cold trap capacity, final moisture, and energy cost.

Key conversion message: the machine processed about 136 kg of half-cut figs per batch and completed drying in 13 hours.
SDG350 freeze dryer used for freeze-dried figs production in China
SDG350 freeze dryer used in the China freeze-dried figs project.
Location China
Year 2020
Product Freeze-dried figs
Product Type Half-cut figs
Product Preparation Figs were cut in half before freeze-drying
Equipment SDG350 freeze dryer
Drying Area 10㎡
Loading Density 13.6 kg/㎡
Batch Loading Approx. 136 kg/batch
Time to Dry 13 hours
Final Moisture Content 1.79%
Vacuum Range 26–96 Pa
Condenser Capacity 2 kg water/㎡/hour
Total Condenser Capacity Approx. 20 kg water/hour
Energy Consumption 1.72 kWh/kg fresh material
Estimated Batch Electricity Use Approx. 233.92 kWh
Project Overview

Commercial Freeze-Dried Fig Production

In 2020, a food processing customer in China used an SDG350 10㎡ commercial freeze dryer to produce freeze-dried figs for commercial fruit processing.

In many regions, dried figs are still mainly produced by traditional sun drying or hot-air drying. These methods are simple, but the drying process is difficult to control. As a result, product color, texture, moisture consistency, and overall quality may not be stable.

To improve dried fig quality, the customer tested vacuum freeze-drying as an alternative drying method. For this project, the figs were cut in half before freeze-drying. This preparation method helped expose the inner tissue of the fruit and supported more efficient moisture removal during drying.

Figs were loaded at 13.6 kg per square meter. With a total drying area of 10㎡, the batch loading capacity reached approximately 136 kg per batch. The drying cycle was completed in approximately 13 hours, and the final moisture content reached 1.79%.

Batch Loading Calculation
10㎡ × 13.6 kg/㎡ = 136 kg

This calculation helps buyers understand real production capacity. Drying area alone is not enough; product preparation, loading density, and drying time must be evaluated together.

Customer Challenge

The Challenge: Improving Fig Drying Quality Beyond Sun Drying and Hot-Air Drying

Traditional fig drying methods are widely used, but they often lack precise control over temperature, drying time, moisture consistency, and final appearance.

1

Traditional Drying Limits

Sun drying and hot-air drying are simple, but product color, texture, and final moisture can vary between batches.

2

Half-Cut Preparation

The figs were cut in half before drying to expose inner tissue and support moisture movement.

3

High-Sugar Fruit

Figs contain natural sugar, so heat input, vacuum level, and drying rate must be controlled carefully.

4

Vacuum Stability

The drying process operated within a 26–96 Pa vacuum range.

5

Cold Trap Capacity

The condenser capacity was designed at 2 kg water/㎡/hour.

6

Energy Control

The energy consumption was approximately 1.72 kWh per kg of fresh material.

SDG350 freeze dryer project image
The Solution

SDG350 10㎡ Freeze Dryer

The SDG350 freeze dryer was selected to support commercial fig processing with stable vacuum control, reliable cold trap capacity, and more controllable drying conditions than traditional drying methods.

  • 10㎡ drying area for commercial fig processing
  • Half-cut figs before freeze-drying
  • 13.6 kg/㎡ loading density and approx. 136 kg per batch
  • 26–96 Pa vacuum range during drying
  • 2 kg water/㎡/hour condenser capture capacity
  • 13-hour drying cycle with 1.79% final moisture
Production Parameters

Real Drying Data for Freeze-Dried Figs

This section gives buyers practical reference data. It shows how product preparation, loading density, vacuum control, cold trap capacity, final moisture, and energy use affect actual production performance.

In this project, the SDG350 processed about 136 kg of half-cut figs per batch. The drying cycle was completed in 13 hours, and the final moisture content reached 1.79%.

Product Half-cut figs
Product Preparation Figs were cut in half before freeze-drying
Fresh Material Loading 13.6 kg/㎡
Total Batch Load Approx. 136 kg/batch
Vacuum Range 26–96 Pa
Condenser Capacity 2 kg water/㎡/hour
Total Condenser Capacity Approx. 20 kg water/hour
Final Moisture 1.79%
Energy Consumption 1.72 kWh/kg fresh material
Drying Time 13 hours
Key Results

Production Result: 13-Hour Drying Cycle

The SDG350 10㎡ freeze dryer completed the half-cut fig drying process in approximately 13 hours. The final moisture content reached 1.79%.

136 kg Half-cut figs per batch
13 h Drying time
1.79% Final moisture
26–96 Pa Vacuum range
233.92 kWh Estimated batch electricity use
Technical Analysis

Why These Data Points Matter

For fig processors, real production data is more useful than general machine descriptions. These parameters help estimate output, freeze dryer cost, and equipment suitability.

1. Traditional Drying Limitations

In many regions, figs are still dried by sun drying or hot-air drying. These methods are simple, but process control is limited. Freeze-drying gave the customer a more controllable method to improve product consistency, final moisture, and appearance.

2. Half-Cut Preparation

Cutting figs in half exposed the inner tissue and helped moisture move out more efficiently during vacuum freeze-drying.

3. Energy Consumption

The energy consumption was approximately 1.72 kWh per kg of fresh material. Based on 136 kg per batch, the estimated electricity use was about 233.92 kWh per batch.

Buyer Takeaways

What Fig Processors Can Learn from This Case

This China freeze-dried figs project shows that fig drying equipment should be evaluated by real drying performance, product preparation method, and energy cost.

1

Drying Method Matters

Sun drying and hot-air drying are common, but freeze-drying offers better control over final moisture, appearance, and batch consistency.

2

Product Preparation Matters

Half-cut figs can expose inner tissue and support more efficient moisture removal during vacuum freeze-drying.

3

Ask for Real Drying Data

Batch load, preparation method, final moisture, vacuum range, condenser capacity, and energy use provide more value than general supplier claims.

4

Match Machine Size to Production Stage

A 10㎡ freeze dryer can be a practical choice for commercial fig and high-sugar fruit production before scaling to larger systems.

Planning to Produce Freeze-Dried Figs?

Please describe your requirements in as much detail as possible. Our team can help you estimate the right freeze dryer configuration and provide the following materials:

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