JOURNAL ARTICLE

Non-destructive measurements of the egg quality

Bart De KetelaereFlip BamelisBart KempsEddy DecuypereJosse De Baerdemaeker

Year: 2004 Journal:   World s Poultry Science Journal Vol: 60 (3)Pages: 289-302   Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Abstract

Due to the increasing throughput of modern egg grading machines, which grade up to 120 000 eggs per hour, the visual inspection of eggs by humans (“candling”), becomes a critical bottleneck in the egg sorting chain. In order to assure a high and consistent egg quality, researchers investigated the use of modern sensor technologies to replace the candling operation. During the last decades, several types of sensors were developed, and it is believed that these sensors will replace human candling in the near future. A first class of sensors is based on mechanical techniques and allows investigation of the physical shell quality, such as the presence of cracks and shell strength. A second class is based upon spectroscopic principles and allows the operator to “see” through the egg shell in order to determine the internal quality of the eggs, such as albumen pH and viscosity and the presence of inclusions such as blood and meat spots. A third class of sensors aims at mimicking the human eye by means of a camera and a software platform (“computer vision”). Besides these types of sensors, some others based on ultrasonic, magnetic resonance and electronic nose principles are investigated and discussed. This paper gives an overview of these modern sensor technologies for egg grading.

Keywords:
Bottleneck Computer science Traceability Grading (engineering) Embedded system Biology Ecology

Metrics

105
Cited By
4.11
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
42
Refs
0.93
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Spectroscopy and Chemometric Analyses
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Analytical Chemistry
Meat and Animal Product Quality
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Animal Science and Zoology
Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering

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