Method and Facility for the Treatment of Brine in Salt Baths for Salting Cheese
20230397623 · 2023-12-14
Inventors
Cpc classification
C02F2103/32
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C02F1/469
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method and facility for the treatment of brine in salt baths for salting cheese are described. First fractions of dissolved salt are carried along in a cleaned brine permeate and second fractions of dissolved salt are carried along in a contaminated brine retentate. A first quantitative ratio between brine permeate and brine retentate is adjusted in such a manner that the quantity of brine retentate corresponds at least to the quantity of whey and constituents that pass into the brine in the salt bath during the dwell time. The cleaned brine permeate and the cleaned brine are merged in a controlled manner in a second quantitative ratio, by means of which the mixture of both components is concentrated to a salt concentration that corresponds at least to a required salt bath concentration.
Claims
1. A method for treatment of brine in a salt bath for salting cheese, comprising: introducing a cheese to be salted in batches or continuously into a predetermined volume of the brine in the salt bath, wherein the cheese undergoes salting there during a specified dwell time, and leaves the salt bath, in batches or continuously accordingly, as salted cheese; circulating the brine during the specified time; passing, during the salting, whey and other constituents from the cheese into the predetermined volume; discharging, to keep the predetermined volume at a constant volume, an excess volume of a contaminated brine that is contaminated by the whey and the other constituents from the salt bath; compensating for concentration and quantity losses of salt and water in the brine in the salt bath; separating, by means of a first membrane separation method, the contaminated brine that is discharged into a cleaned brine permeate that is cleaned of the whey and the other constituents and a contaminated brine retentate that is contaminated with the whey and the other constituents; desalinating the contaminated brine retentate by means of a second membrane separation method, which is configured so that at least a portion of the salt is transferred into a flow of receiving water and dissolved therein, wherein the receiving water and the salt dissolved therein form a cleaned brine, and a desalinated contaminated brine retentate is discarded as wastewater; introducing the cleaned brine permeate and the cleaned brine into the brine in the salt bath; carrying first fractions of dissolved salt in the cleaned brine permeate and second fractions of dissolved salt in the contaminated brine retentate; adjusting a first quantitative ratio between the cleaned brine permeate and the contaminated brine retentate in such a manner that the quantity of the contaminated brine retentate corresponds at least to the quantity of the whey and the other constituents that pass into the brine in the salt bath during the specified dwell time; dimensioning a flow of the contaminated brine that is discharged in connection with the adjusted first quantitative ratio in such a manner that a chloride content in the desalinated contaminated brine retentate does not exceed a statutory limit for introduction of the desalinated contaminated brine retentate into surface water; and merging, in a controlled manner, the cleaned brine permeate and the cleaned brine in a second quantitative ratio, by means of which a mixture of both components is concentrated to a salt concentration that corresponds at least to a required salt bath concentration.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the first membrane separation method is designed as an ultrafiltration method.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the second membrane separation method is designed as an electrodialysis method.
4. The method according to claim 2, wherein the second membrane separation method is designed as an electrodialysis method.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the salt is at least one or sodium chloride or calcium chloride.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the other constituents comprise at least one of protein, lactose, lactic acid.
7. A facility for treatment of brine in salt baths for salting cheese, comprising: a salt bath unit that receives the brine in the salt bath; a cheese provision unit, from which a cheese to be salted is fed to a specific volume of the brine in the salt bath in batches or continuously; a salt provision unit, from which salt is fed to the brine in the salt bath; a water provision unit that provides water for the brine in the salt bath; a cheese receiving unit that receives a cheese salted in the brine in the salt bath during a dwell time, accordingly in batches or continuously; a first brine separating unit is connected to the salt bath in a fluid-conducting manner via a brine discharge line, wherein the first brine separating unit is configured to separate, using a first membrane separation method, a brine discharged from the salt bath and contaminated by whey and other constituents from the cheese into a brine permeate that is cleaned of the whey and the other constituents and a brine retentate that is contaminated with the whey and the other constituents, and wherein first fractions of dissolved salt are carried along in the brine permeate and second fractions of dissolved salt are carried along in the brine retentate; a control apparatus in controlling connection with a status information of the salt bath via a first control connection and with the first brine separating unit via a second control connection, wherein the control apparatus is configured to dimension a flow of the brine discharged from the salt bath and to adjust a first quantitative ratio between the brine permeate and the brine retentate in such a manner that the quantity of brine retentate corresponds at least to the quantity of the whey and the other constituents that passes into the brine in the salt bath in during the dwell time; a second brine separating unit configured to transfer, using a second membrane separation method, the brine retentate into a wastewater through desalination, wherein: a chloride content of the wastewater does not exceed a statutory limit for introduction into surface water; the second fractions of dissolved salt in the brine retentate are transferred into a flow of water and are dissolved therein, and the water and the salt dissolved therein form a cleaned brine; and the second brine separating unit is connected, in a fluid-conducting manner, to a concentrate drain line for the contaminated brine retentate, which leads to the first brine separating unit, and to a first brine feed line for the cleaned brine and connected, in a fluid-conducting manner, to a wastewater line for the wastewater with a wastewater receiving apparatus and to the water provision unit via a water feed line for the water; and a permeate drain line for the brine permeate, wherein the permeate drain line and the brine feed line are each connected in a fluid-conducting manner to the salt bath.
8. The facility according to claim 7, wherein the first brine separating unit is designed as an ultrafiltration unit.
9. The facility according to claim 7, wherein the second brine separating unit is designed as an electrodialysis unit.
10. The facility according to claim 8, wherein the second brine separating unit is designed as an electrodialysis unit.
11. The facility according to claim 9, wherein the electrodialysis unit has at least one first ion exchange membrane stack.
12. The facility according to claim 7, wherein the permeate drain line and the first brine feed line are merged in a fluid-conducting manner in a brine concentrating unit, and are connected in a fluid-conducting manner from there to the salt bath via a second brine feed line.
13. The facility according to claim 12, wherein the control apparatus is in controlling connection with the brine concentrating unit via a third control connection and is configured to achieve a controlled merging of the brine permeate and the cleaned brine in a second quantitative ratio, by means of which a mixture of both components is concentrated to a salt concentration that corresponds at least to a required salt bath concentration.
14. The method according to claim 1, wherein the salt is sodium chloride.
15. The method according to claim 1, wherein the salt is calcium chloride.
16. The method according to claim 2, wherein the other constituents comprise at least one of protein, lactose, lactic acid, or dust.
17. The method according to claim 3, wherein the other constituents comprise at least one of protein, lactose, lactic acid, or dust.
18. The facility according to claim 10, wherein the electrodialysis unit has at least one first ion exchange membrane stack.
19. The facility according to claim 8, wherein the permeate drain line and the first brine feed line are merged in a fluid-conducting manner in a brine concentrating unit, and the permeate drain line and the first brine feed line are connected in a fluid-conducting manner from there to the salt bath via a second brine feed line.
20. The facility according to claim 9, wherein the permeate drain line and the first brine feed line are merged in a fluid-conducting manner in a brine concentrating unit, and the permeate drain line and the first brine feed line are connected in a fluid-conducting manner from there to the salt bath via a second brine feed line.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0048]
[0049]
[0050] The invention is represented in more detail by the following description, the appended figures, and the claims. While the invention is realized in a wide variety of embodiments of a preferred method in accordance with the present invention and a facility in accordance with the present invention for the performance thereof, the drawings show a preferred facility in accordance with the present invention with which a preferred embodiment of the method is performed. The facility is described below according to structure and function, and the method is described below in conjunction with the facility.
[0051]
[0052]
[0053]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0054] Referring to
[0055] The salt bath 2.1 has a required salt bath concentration c that is adapted to the respective unsalted cheese K to be salted during a dwell time T. The brine SL is circulated, for example, via a circulation line 2.2 (circulating UW) designed as a bypass to the salt bath 2.1. Other circulating apparatuses that have a circulating effect (e.g., pump) within the salt bath 2.1 are also implemented. Whey M and other constituents B escaping from the unsalted or, respectively, salted cheese K, KS during salting SA enter the brine SL, as a result of which it becomes a contaminated brine SL* over the course of the dwell time T.
[0056] Over the course of the dwell time τ, the contaminated brine SL* exceeds a predetermined capacity of the salt bath 2.1, the predetermined volume V, due to the whey M and the other constituents B passing into it, and a resulting excess volume ΔV, an overflow volume, is forced into an overflow tank 12, for example, via a brine discharge line 24, stacked there (stacking ST), and from there discarded (purging A) if necessary into a drain 14 via a brine drain line 26.
[0057] Referring to
[0058] Referring to
[0059] Compared to the known first facility 1, the facility 100 in accordance with the present invention is built as follows. A first brine separating unit 30 (separating TR) is connected to the salt bath 2.1 in a fluid-conducting manner via the brine discharge line 24. The first brine separating unit 30 is configured to separate the contaminated brine SL* discharged from the salt bath 2.1 into a cleaned brine permeate SLP and a contaminated brine retentate SLR by means of a first membrane separation method MT1, wherein first fractions x1 of dissolved salt S are carried along in the cleaned brine permeate SLP and whey M and other constituents B that contaminate the contaminated brine SL* are retained in the contaminated brine retentate SLR. The cleaned brine permeate SLP is discharged via a permeate drain line 34 and the contaminated brine retentate SLR is discharged via a retentate drain line 40.
[0060] A control apparatus 60 is provided, which is connected in a controlling manner to a status information of the salt bath 2.1 via a first control connection a and to the first brine separating unit 30 via a second control connection b1. The control apparatus 60 is configured to dimension a flow of the discharged contaminated brine SL* or, respectively, to adjust it to a necessary volume flow (dimensioning BM) and adjust (adjusting ES) a first quantitative ratio MV1 between the brine permeate SLP and the brine retentate SLR in such a manner that the quantity of brine retentate SLR corresponds at least to the quantity of whey M and constituents B that pass into the brine in the salt bath 2.1 during the dwell time τ;
[0061] A second brine separating unit 50 is provided and configured to transfer the contaminated brine retentate SLR into wastewater WA through desalination by means of a second membrane separation method MT2. In doing so, at least a portion of second fractions x2 of salt S dissolved in the contaminated brine retentate SLR is transferred into a flow of water W, which is fed (providing water WB) out of the water provision unit 10 via a water feed line 44, and the water W and the salt S dissolved therein form a cleaned brine SLK.
[0062] On the one hand, the second brine separating unit 50 is connected to the retentate drain line 40 for the contaminated brine retentate SLR, which leads to the first brine separating unit 30, and to a first brine feed line 36 for the cleaned brine SLK, in each case in a fluid-conducting manner. On the other hand, the brine separating unit 50 is connected to a wastewater drain line 42 for the wastewater WA or, respectively, for a desalinated contaminated brine retentate SLR* to a wastewater receiving apparatus 46 (receiving wastewater WAA) and to the water provision unit 10 via the water feed line 44 for the water W, in each case in a fluid-conducting manner.
[0063] In a first embodiment, the permeate drain line 34 for the cleaned brine permeate SLP and the brine feed line 36 are each connected to the salt bath 2.1 in a fluid-conducting manner.
[0064] According to a second embodiment, the permeate drain line 34 and the first brine feed line 36 are merged (controlled merging Z; concentrating AK) in a fluid-conducting manner in a brine concentrating unit 32 and are connected in a fluid-conducting manner from there to the salt bath 2.1 via a second brine feed line 38 (introducing E). The controlled merging Z takes place with a second quantitative ratio MV2 between the cleaned brine permeate SLP and the cleaned brine SLK. For this purpose, the control apparatus 60 is in controlling connection with the brine concentrating unit 32 via a third control connection b2. In the latter, the two mixture components are dimensioned so that in the mixture a salt concentration c1 sets in that corresponds at least to the required salt bath concentration c.
[0065] According to an advantageous and particularly expedient embodiment, the first brine separating unit 30 is designed as an ultrafiltration unit 30.1 (ultrafiltration method UF), which has, for example, the first quantitative ratio MV1=3.6 (known as a volume concentration factor VCF). The consequences from this parameter are shown in the example given further below (quantitative balances).
[0066] According to another advantageous and particularly expedient embodiment, the second brine separating unit 50 is designed as an electrodialysis unit 50.1 (electrodialysis method ED). The electrodialysis unit 50.1 has at least one first ion exchange membrane stack 50.2; 50.3; . . . .
[0067] Due to the action mechanism of the electrodialysis method ED, sodium ions Na.sup.+ to a high degree and calcium ions Ca.sup.2+ (not shown) to a very small degree escape from the contaminated brine retentate SLR and, to a correspondingly high or, respectively, very low degree, chlorine ions Cl— (chloride) enter into the flow of water W fed to the electrodialysis unit 50.1 via the water feed line 44 and form the cleaned brine SLK in the first brine feed line 36 opening out from the electrodialysis unit 50.1.
[0068] Optimal separation results are achieved, as is also provided, when the first brine separating unit 30 is designed as an ultrafiltration unit 30.1 and is operated in connection with the second brine separating unit 50 designed as an electrodialysis unit 50.1.
[0069] The method that can be performed with the previously described facility 100 in accordance with the present invention has the following generic features, which are known per se, shown in
[0070] Method steps (i) to (iv) according to the invention are the following: [0071] (i) First fractions x1 of dissolved salt S are carried along in the cleaned brine permeate SLP and second fractions x2 of dissolved salt S are carried along in the contaminated brine retentate SLR. The first membrane separation method MT1 is configured to carry along first fractions x1 of dissolved salt S in the brine permeate SLP and to retain constituents B, which contaminate the contaminated brine SL*, in the contaminated brine retentate SLR. [0072] (ii) Adjusting ES the first quantitative ratio MV1 between the brine permeate SLP and the brine retentate SLR in such a manner that the quantity of brine retentate SLR corresponds at least to the quantity of whey M and constituents B that pass into the brine SL in the salt bath 2.1 during the dwell time T. [0073] (iii) Dimensioning BM a flow of the discharged contaminated brine SL* in connection with the adjusted first quantitative ratio MV1 in such a manner that a chloride content Cl— in the desalinated contaminated brine retentate SLR* does not exceed a statutory limit for the introduction of the desalinated contaminated brine retentate SLR* into surface water. [0074] (iv) Merging Z, in a controlled manner, the cleaned brine permeate SLP and the cleaned brine SLK in a second quantitative ratio, by means of which the mixture of both components is concentrated AK to a salt concentration c1 that corresponds at least to a required salt bath concentration c.
[0075] The first membrane separation method MT1 is preferably designed as an ultrafiltration method UF and the second membrane separation method MT2 is preferably designed as an electrodialysis method ED, wherein optimal separation results are achieved when the first membrane separation method MT1 is designed as an ultrafiltration method UF and is operated in connection with the second membrane separation method MT2 designed as an electrodialysis method ED.
[0076] The method is particularly suitable for recycling salt S in contaminated brine SL* from the process of salting SA cheese in the form of sodium chloride (NaCl) and/or calcium chloride (CaCl.sub.2) and for separating the other constituents B from the contaminated brine SL* such as protein, lactose, lactic acid, other residues, and dust.
[0077] The following calculation estimates show a quantitative and salt balance for the method in accordance with the present invention that is performed with the facility 100 in accordance with the present invention described above and the associated estimated salt and cost savings.
EXAMPLES
[0078] Starting Situation in Many Cheese Factories: [0079] Adding cheese K in batches or continuously at X kgK/h and a starting salt content xs in kgS/kgK to a salt bath 2.1 with predetermined volume V of brine SL and correspondingly discharging from the salt bath 2.1 in batches or continuously at Y KgK/h and a salt content of ys in kgS/kgK. Typically, the following applies: X>Y and xs<ys. [0080] The brine SL in the salt bath contains, depending on the type of cheese, approx. 20% NaCl (0.2 kgS/kgSL or 200 gS/1 SL-1: liter). [0081] The cheese rind absorbs brine SL, whereby it swells and the cheese matrix of the cheese rind becomes permeable. [0082] As the dwell time z of the cheese K in the salt bath 2.1 progresses, water (whey M) passes into the brine SL through osmotic pressure, while salt S diffuses out of the brine SL into the interior of the cheese, whereby the cheese K absorbs a quantity of salt according to equation (1)
ΔS=Y ys−X xs (1). [0083] This quantity of salt ΔS absorbed by the cheese K is withdrawn from the brine SL of the salt bath 2.1. In addition, the escaping whey M dilutes the brine SL, as a result of which salt S must be continuously added to the brine SL to maintain the required salt bath concentration c. [0084] The escaping whey M contains additional dissolved/dispersed cheese components (including proteins, minerals, microorganisms, fats) that pass into the brine SL in the salt bath 2.1, referred to above as constituents B, and continuously pollute it (contaminated brine SL*). [0085] The calcium originating from the cheesemaking milk and contained partially in the whey M after cheese production passes into the salt bath with the whey as dissociated Ca.sup.2+ ions. As a result of this loss of calcium and the sodium absorption, the cheese rind would swell too much and become soft as a result, which would be disadvantageous for the stability of the cheese K. Therefore, in addition to the NaCl concentration, the CaCl.sub.2) concentration in the salt bath 2.1 is also held at a controlled high level in order to compensate as much as possible for the osmotic pressure of the Ca.sup.2+ ions from the cheese K through additional dosing of CaCl.sub.2) solution into the salt bath. Additional dosing is required because the brine SL in the salt bath 2.1 continuously increases in volume as the whey quantity is absorbed and the reservoir of the salt bath 2.1 would effectively overflow. In the industrial salting process, this “overflow,” an overflow volume or excess volume ΔV, is initially caught in overflow tanks and then drained in a targeted manner during the process known as “purging.” During purging A today, meaning the drainage of the excess brine from the salt bath system into the wastewater, the salt and contaminants contained therein, including NaCl and CaCl.sub.2), are lost with the wastewater. Since the dissolved salts NaCl and CaCl.sub.2) are present in a dissociated form, the CaCl.sub.2) also thus contributes to the chloride concentration (Cl.sup.− ions) in the wastewater.
Example 1
Prior Art—Operating Values Achieved
[0086] Quantitative and salt balance in the example of a large-scale industrial cheese-salting process, in which the cheese K to be salted is introduced in batches or continuously into a predetermined volume V of the brine SL in the salt bath 2.1 and leaves the salt bath 2.1, in batches or continuously accordingly, as salted cheese KS. [0087] X=92,000 kgK/d of cheese K go into the salt bath 2.1 with a natural salt content of xs=salt S (xs=0.009 kgS/kgK) and thus carry X xs=828 kgS/d with them (d: day). [0088] 25,000 kg of salt S are introduced into the salt bath 2.1 for the purpose of salting over a time period of approx. 11 days, meaning approx. 2,300 kgS/d, corresponding to approx. 830 tS/a (at approx. 350 d/a), and thus at approx. 70 €/tS results in salting costs of approx. 56,000 €/a (t: ton, a: year). [0089] 4,950 lSL/d of brine purging+2,700 lSL/d of salt bath filter emptying result in 7,650 lSL/d of brine loss (lSL/d=liter SL/d). [0090] Wastewater/loss at 19.5% salt concentration (0.195 kgS/kgSL) at a density of 1.11 kgSL/lSL result in approx. 8,490 kgSL/d of brine SL, which are divided into approx. 0.195×8,490=1,680 kgS/d of salt S and 6,830 kgW/d of (water+constituents). [0091] Yearly salt losses in the wastewater at around 580 tS/a at 70 €/tS result in purging costs of more than 40,000 €/a. [0092]
From the emission of 580 tS/a, a chloride emission of approx. 351 tCl-/a and a sodium emission of approx. 230 tNa+/a result via the molar masses of sodium (22.99) and chlorine (35.45). [0093] The cheese K absorbs (2,300−1,600)=640 kgS/d of salt S and emits 6,830 kgW/d (W here stands for: water+constituents). [0094]
Usable salt absorption approx. 640 kgS/d of salt S and at 350 d/a correspondingly 224 tS/a of salt S. [0095]
(92,000−6,830+640)=85,810 kgK/d of salted cheese KS leaves the salt bath 2.1. [0096]
After the salt bath 2.1, 85,810 kgK/d of salted cheese KS contain in total (828+640)=1,468 kgS/d of salt S, which corresponds to a salt content ys=1,468 kgS/d/(85,810 kgK/d)=0.017 kgS/kgK (1.7%). [0097] Approximately 1,000 l/a of 22% CaCl.sub.2 solution with a density p=1.198 kg/l (http://www.periodensystem-online.de) result in 264 kg of CaCl.sub.2/a (corresponding to kg of CaCl.sub.2/d at 350 d/a). They are continuously additionally dosed to maintain CaCl.sub.2 (0.004 kgCaCl.sub.2/kgW; W=water+constituents) in the salt bath 2.1 (analysis value for Ca.sup.2+=0.0015 kgCa.sup.2+/kgSL, with the molar ratio of 40 (Ca)/11,098 (CaCl.sub.2) corresponds to a concentration of 0.4% CaCl.sub.2 in water+constituents). [0098]
With 6,830 kgW/d, 6,830×0.004=27 kg/d CaCl.sub.2 (=10 kgCa.sup.2+/d+17 kgCL-/d) go into the wastewater, at 350 d/a correspondingly 6 tCl-/a. [0099] Added wastewater costs due to chloride content Cl—>200 mg/l(water+constituents) (>kgCl-/kg(water+constituents) at 0.13 €/kgCl— amount to [0100]
(351+6) tCl-/a×130 €/tCl-=approx. 46,000 €/a. [0101]
The chloride ions Cl— in the wastewater from CaCl.sub.2 play only a subordinate role compared to the chloride ions Cl— in the wastewater from NaCl. [0102] The total costs due to salt loss+added wastewater costs alone at approx. 40,000+46,000 amount to more than=86,000 €/a.
Example 2
[0103] Expansion of the facility according to example 1 from 92,000 kg/d=92 t/d of unsalted cheese K by a factor of 1.7 to 156 t/d of unsalted cheese K (scaling of the values from example 1 with a scaling factor of 1.7). [0104] 156 tK/d of cheese K with xs=0.009 kgS/kgK go into the salt bath 2.1 (1,400 kgS/d). [0105] 3,900 kgS/d=1,360 tS/a at 70 €/tS result in salting costs of approx. 95,000 €/a. [0106] 13,000 lSL/d of brine loss SL at 19.5% salt concentration at a density of 1.11 kgSL/lSL result in approx. 14,400 kgSL/d of brine SL, which are divided into approx. 2,810 kgS/d of salt S and approx. 11,590 kgW/d of (water+constituents). [0107] Yearly salt loss in the wastewater at around 990 tS/a at 70 €/tS result in purging costs of approx. 70,000 €/a. [0108]
From the emission of 990 tS/a, a chloride emission of approx. 600 tCl-/a and a sodium emission of approx. 390 tNa+/a result via the molar masses of sodium (22.99) and chlorine (35.45). [0109] The cheese K absorbs (3,900−2,810)=1,090 kgS/d of salt S and emits 11,590 kgW/d of (water+constituents). [0110]
Usable salt absorption approx. 1,090 kS/d of salt S and at 350 d/a correspondingly 382 tS/salt S. [0111]
(156−11.59+1.09)=145 tK/d of salted cheese KS leaves the salt bath 2.1. [0112]
Additional CaCl.sub.2 dosing delivers 10 tCl-/a into the wastewater. [0113] Added wastewater costs due to chloride content Cl—>200 mg/l(water+constituents) (>kgCl-/kg(water+constituents) at 0.13 €/kgCl— [0114]
(600+10) tCl-/a×130 €/tCl->79,000 €/a. [0115] The total costs due to salt loss+added wastewater costs alone at approx. 70,000+79,000 amount to more than=149,000 €/a.
Example 3
[0116] Example 3 starts from the salting process shown and estimated in example 2 (scaling factor of 1.7 compared to the salting process according to example 1) and with the objective of [0117] hygienic cleaning of the salt bath 2.1 [0118] efficient salt recycling [0119] maintaining max. 200 mgCl-/l(water+constituents) corresponding to 0.0002 kgCl-/kg(water+constituents) corresponding to 320 mgNaCl/kg(water+constituents) corresponding to 0.00032 kgNaCl/kg(water+constituents) into surface water shows the results which can be achieved, and which are shown in
TABLE-US-00001 Item Example 2 Example 3 Unsalted cheese K tK/d 156 156 Salted cheese KS tK/d 145 145 Salting - salt S tS/d 3.90 1.16 Salt loss NaCl (in wastewater) tNaCl/d 2.81 0.07 Chloride Cl— (in wastewater) tCl—/d 1.70 0.04 Chloride Cl— limit mg/l W >>200 <200
[0120] The following is a list of reference signs used in this specification and in the drawings.
FIGS. 1 and 3 (Prior Art)
[0121] 1 Known first facility [0122] 2 Salt bath unit [0123] 2.1 Salt bath [0124] 2.2 Circulation line [0125] 4 Cheese provision unit [0126] 6 Salt provision unit [0127] 8 Cheese receiving unit [0128] 10 Water provision unit [0129] 12 Overflow tank [0130] 14 Drain [0131] 16 Cheese feed apparatus [0132] 18 Salt feed apparatus [0133] 20 Water feed line [0134] 22 Cheese discharge apparatus [0135] 24 Brine discharge line [0136] 26 Brine drain line [0137] A Purging [0138] B Constituents [0139] K Unsalted cheese [0140] KA Receiving cheese [0141] KB Providing cheese [0142] KS Salted cheese [0143] M Whey [0144] S Salt [0145] SA Salting [0146] SB Providing salt [0147] SL Brine (originally prepared or cleaned) [0148] SL* Contaminated brine [0149] ST Stacking [0150] UW Circulating [0151] V Predetermined volume [0152] ΔV Excess volume [0153] W Water [0154] WB Providing water [0155] c Required salt bath concentration [0156] τ Dwell time
FIG. 1a (Prior Art)
[0157] 1* Known second facility [0158] 27 Filter [0159] 28 Heater [0160] 29 Branching line [0161] 29.1 First shutoff valve [0162] 29.2 Second shutoff valve [0163] F Filtering [0164] H Heating (boiling) [0165] SL+Filtered and boiled brine [0166] WM Heat transfer medium [0167]