Freeze-Dried Blueberries Case Study: 30㎡ Freeze Dryer
Customer Case Study · Czech Republic · 2014

Freeze-Dried Blueberries Case Study

How a Czech food processor used an SDG1100 30㎡ freeze dryer to process approximately 360 kg of perforated fresh blueberries per batch and complete drying in 13 hours.

30㎡ Drying Area 360 kg Fresh Blueberries/Batch 13-Hour Drying Cycle 1.97% Final Moisture
13 h Time to dry
30㎡ Drying area
26–90 Pa Vacuum range
Drying Area 30㎡
Fresh Blueberry Load 360 kg
Drying Time 13 Hours
Final Moisture 1.97%
Energy Use 1.8 kWh/kg
Project Data

Quick Facts

This blueberry project used real production data instead of general marketing claims. The data helps food manufacturers evaluate batch capacity, pretreatment method, condenser capacity, drying time, vacuum range, and energy cost.

Key conversion message: the machine processed about 360 kg of perforated fresh blueberries per batch and completed drying in 13 hours.
Czech Republic freeze-dried blueberries production project using SDG1100 freeze dryer
Project photo from the Czech Republic freeze-dried blueberries case using an SDG1100 freeze dryer.
Location Czech Republic
Year 2014
Product Freeze-dried blueberries
Equipment SDG1100 freeze dryer
Drying Area 30㎡
Fresh Blueberry Loading 12 kg/㎡
Fresh Blueberry Load per Batch Approx. 360 kg
Pretreatment Perforation pretreatment
Time to Dry 13 hours
Final Moisture Content 1.97%
Vacuum Range 26–90 Pa
Condenser Capacity 2 kg water/㎡/hour
Total Condenser Capacity Approx. 60 kg water/hour
Energy Consumption 1.8 kWh/kg fresh material
Estimated Batch Electricity Use Approx. 648 kWh
Project Overview

Commercial Freeze-Dried Blueberry Production

In 2014, a food processing customer in the Czech Republic used an SDG1100 30㎡ commercial freeze dryer to produce freeze-dried blueberries for commercial fruit processing.

Blueberries are a high-value fruit product, but they can be more difficult to dry than sliced fruits because the skin can slow moisture release. For this reason, the customer used perforation pretreatment before freeze-drying.

For this project, fresh blueberries were loaded at 12 kg per square meter. With a total drying area of 30㎡, the batch loading capacity reached approximately 360 kg of fresh blueberries per batch.

Batch Loading Calculation
30㎡ × 12 kg/㎡ = 360 kg

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

Customer Challenge

The Challenge: Drying Blueberries Efficiently After Pretreatment

Blueberries have a natural skin structure that can limit moisture movement. Perforation pretreatment helped improve moisture release during sublimation.

1

Skin Barrier

Whole blueberries can release moisture more slowly than sliced fruit because of their skin structure.

2

Perforation Pretreatment

Perforation helped improve moisture movement and supported a practical drying cycle.

3

Low Final Moisture

The final moisture content reached 1.97%, supporting commercial product stability.

4

Vacuum Stability

The drying process operated within a 26–90 Pa vacuum range.

5

Condenser Capacity

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

6

Energy Control

The energy consumption was approximately 1.8 kWh per kg of fresh material.

Process Experience

Pretreatment Test: Why Perforation Was Selected

To achieve better freeze-drying results, several blueberry pretreatment methods were compared before finalizing the production process.

Blueberries have a natural skin barrier, which can slow moisture movement during vacuum freeze-drying. To improve drying efficiency and final product quality, different pretreatment methods were tested, including perforation, surface scratching, removing the top and bottom skin, and soaking in a Na2CO3 solution.

After comparison, perforation and surface scratching produced freeze-dried blueberries with a more uniform porous structure. The internal tissue showed no obvious collapse, and the original structure and appearance of the blueberries were better preserved.

These two pretreatment methods also helped maintain the dried blueberry skin color more effectively. Overall product quality was better than blueberries treated by alkaline soaking, top-skin removal, or bottom-skin removal.

After comparing drying efficiency and final product quality, perforation pretreatment was selected as the preferred process for this freeze-dried blueberry project.

Perforation Selected method. Balanced drying efficiency, structure retention, and final product appearance.
Surface scratching Produced good porous structure and helped preserve blueberry tissue.
Top / bottom skin removal Less favorable overall quality compared with perforation and scratching.
Na2CO3 soaking Lower overall product quality compared with physical pretreatment methods.
SDG1100 project image
The Solution

SDG1100 30㎡ Freeze Dryer

The SDG1100 freeze dryer was selected to support medium-scale blueberry production, stable vacuum control, predictable batch drying, and practical energy consumption.

  • 30㎡ drying area for medium-scale commercial fruit production
  • 12 kg/㎡ fresh blueberry loading density
  • Perforation pretreatment for better moisture release
  • 26–90 Pa vacuum range during drying
  • 2 kg water/㎡/hour condenser capture capacity
  • 13-hour drying cycle with 1.97% final moisture
Production Parameters

Real Drying Data for Blueberry Freeze-Drying

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

In this project, the SDG1100 processed about 360 kg of perforated fresh blueberries per batch. The drying cycle was completed in 13 hours, and the final moisture content reached 1.97%.

Product Blueberries
Pretreatment Perforation pretreatment
Fresh Material Loading 12 kg/㎡
Total Fresh Blueberry Load Approx. 360 kg/batch
Vacuum Range 26–90 Pa
Condenser Capacity 2 kg water/㎡/hour
Total Condenser Capacity Approx. 60 kg water/hour
Final Moisture 1.97%
Energy Consumption 1.8 kWh/kg fresh material
Drying Time 13 hours
Key Results

Production Result: 13-Hour Drying Cycle

The SDG1100 30㎡ freeze dryer completed the blueberry drying process in approximately 13 hours. The final moisture content reached 1.97%.

360 kg Fresh blueberries per batch
13 h Drying time
1.97% Final moisture
26–90 Pa Vacuum range
648 kWh Estimated batch electricity use
Technical Analysis

Why These Data Points Matter

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

1. Loading Density

The customer loaded fresh blueberries at 12 kg/㎡. For a 30㎡ freeze dryer, this means approximately 360 kg of fresh blueberries per batch. This gives buyers a clearer way to estimate production capacity.

2. Condenser Capacity

The condenser capacity was 2 kg water/㎡/hour. Based on a 30㎡ drying area, the maximum condenser capture capacity reached approximately 60 kg water/hour during high-load drying stages.

3. Energy Consumption

The energy consumption was approximately 1.8 kWh per kg of fresh material. Based on 360 kg per batch, the estimated electricity use was about 648 kWh per batch.

Buyer Takeaways

What Food Manufacturers Can Learn from This Case

This Czech Republic blueberry project shows that berry freeze-drying equipment should be evaluated by real drying performance, not only by machine size or price.

1

Pretreatment Matters

Blueberry skin can slow moisture release. Perforation pretreatment can help improve drying efficiency and product quality.

2

Ask for Real Drying Data

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

3

Check Energy Consumption

Energy use affects the real production cost. In this case, the energy consumption was 1.8 kWh per kg of fresh material.

4

Match Machine Size to Production Stage

A 30㎡ freeze dryer can be a practical choice for medium-scale commercial fruit production before scaling to larger systems.

Planning to Produce Freeze-Dried Blueberries?

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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