Podcast

Episodio 26: Industrie Kemin

In questo episodio, Gregg Schieffer, scienziato associato presso Kemin Industries, si unisce a The Drip by AQUALAB per esplorare il ruolo critico dell'acqua nella scienza degli ingredienti e nello sviluppo dei prodotti. Kemin, leader mondiale nel settore degli ingredienti speciali, applica la ricerca scientifica in diversi settori, tra cui quello alimentare, degli alimenti per animali e dell'agricoltura. Gregg condivide le sue intuizioni su come l'acqua influisce sulla stabilità, la sicurezza e l'efficacia dei prodotti su cui lavora, evidenziando il ruolo essenziale del controllo dell'umidità nella tecnologia alimentare e non solo.

Informazioni sull'ospite


Gregg Schieffer è uno scienziato associato presso Kemin Industries, dove si occupa di ricerca sugli ingredienti e sviluppo dei prodotti. Con una solida formazione in chimica e scienze alimentari, Gregg lavora all'ottimizzazione delle formulazioni in diversi settori, garantendo la qualità e la stabilità dei prodotti. La sua esperienza consiste nel comprendere la scienza della gestione dell'umidità e il modo in cui essa influisce sulle prestazioni del prodotto.

Trascrizione


0:00
I'm Zachary Cartwright this is water and
0:02
food earlier today I had the chance to
0:04
meet with Dr Greg Schaefer at Chemin
0:06
Industries we talked about his role as
0:08
an associate scientist and some of the
0:10
things that he's doing with his Aqua lab
0:12
Vapor absorption analyzer let's hear
0:14
what Greg has to say in water and food
0:16
hi Greg welcome to water and food how
0:19
are you doing today
0:20
yeah I'm doing great how are you Zachary
0:22
I'm great thank you so much for coming
0:24
on the show I know we've tried a few
0:25
times to get you on and you're finally
0:27
here so we're glad to have you
0:30
yes glad to be here uh Greg you're an
0:33
associate scientist what does that mean
0:35
what do you do
0:36
yeah so I wear uh quite a few hats uh
0:40
within Chemin uh Industries
0:42
um primarily work with serving our pet
0:45
food customers
0:46
and uh one of the ways that I do that is
0:48
helping run quite a bit of the the
0:50
instruments so collect uh meaningful
0:53
data so that as we present to our
0:55
customers we can you know make business
0:58
decisions on it and help them have a
1:01
better product as their uh you know
1:04
needing to make the decisions to serve
1:06
their customers and and what's a day in
1:09
your shoes look like are you always
1:11
working on instruments are you designing
1:13
experiments or is it yeah designing
1:15
experiments and then then yeah running
1:17
running instruments so one of the the
1:19
instruments which brings us together is
1:21
that uh work with a meter group with the
1:24
vapor absorption analyzer and we've had
1:27
the privilege to uh have this within our
1:30
our uh assortment of uh analytical tools
1:34
for a little over a year now and uh
1:37
We've yeah frequently we're interested
1:39
trying to understand how our powders our
1:41
uh May react
1:44
how they may adjust as as a water
1:48
activity around them changes or
1:49
depending on their warehouse
1:51
so it's it's kind of a far cry from
1:54
where I was thinking when I was first uh
1:56
studying and and deciding to become a
1:58
scientist and I think that happens to a
2:01
lot of scientists you know you you start
2:03
somewhere and you end up down a
2:04
completely different path where did you
2:07
start Greg what is your science
2:09
background where did you go to school
2:10
and how did that help you prepare for
2:13
your job at Chemin
2:15
yeah so I uh started off um at
2:18
University of St Thomas up in St Paul
2:20
Minnesota
2:21
and uh from there decided to uh become a
2:25
chemist
2:26
and uh just solid take all the chemistry
2:29
courses I could couldn't manage and uh
2:32
they uh one of my professors convinced
2:35
me hey
2:37
you're pretty good with research
2:38
instruments wants to consider graduate
2:40
school I don't know if that's like their
2:41
favorite thing to say I'm sure I would
2:43
have had a fine job somewhere in the
2:45
Twin Cities just a lot of great
2:46
companies up there but uh decided to
2:49
continue on to graduate school and try
2:52
to pursue Mass spectrometry so
2:55
um help build some uh
2:57
special home-built Mass spectrometers
2:59
some of the techniques are used within
3:01
industry but they weren't that useful
3:05
there were difficult instruments used
3:08
certainly not as sensitive as something
3:09
you can buy off the shelf or buy
3:11
commercially so
3:13
but uh with that it prepared me to work
3:16
with with instruments and to to
3:20
understand the value that they can that
3:23
of the of the data that you can collect
3:26
from it certainly
3:27
and once you're we're done with graduate
3:30
school how did you find Kim and what
3:32
what stood out about this company that
3:34
made you want to to join them
3:37
yeah they're uh uh certainly a uh
3:41
fast-paced uh science company based here
3:43
in Iowa so
3:45
um my my wife and and now kids they've
3:48
been born here in Iowa yes uh how to say
3:51
Iowa Roots Run pretty deep so this was
3:54
an opportunity to be with a fast-paced
3:57
company that is you know certainly very
3:59
eager to to develop the best solutions
4:02
for our customers to help them succeed
4:04
in the marketplace
4:06
and uh uh having a strong
4:09
instrumentation background it was a
4:11
natural fit it was actually a different
4:13
group that wanted to bring me in before
4:16
I uh joined the group that helped serve
4:18
our pet food manufacturers and
4:21
pet parents and what types of projects
4:24
were you doing before pet food have you
4:26
always just done pet food at Chemin or
4:28
have there been other things that you've
4:29
worked on no I I worked within a corn
4:32
wet Milling in another part of Iowa and
4:35
uh before that had a short stint trying
4:38
to
4:39
see if I fit well within the you know
4:42
drug Discovery or some of the medical
4:43
side but it wasn't quite the right fit
4:46
for whatever reason I've uh kind of hit
4:48
my
4:49
um stride within the food industry even
4:52
though I I don't have a food science or
4:54
food engineering background I've kind of
4:57
worked my way in through
5:00
through doing it you know as as you need
5:02
to do it with the experiments learning
5:05
on the job sure yes and my job's kind of
5:08
similar uh Greg I started off in pre-med
5:12
and then looking at dentistry and wine
5:14
making and finally food science so it's
5:17
kind of like we both both ended up where
5:19
we need to be I think absolutely yes
5:23
um what are some of the challenges that
5:24
you faced in in some of these previous
5:26
projects and and how did that point you
5:28
to looking at Water activity and also
5:30
isotherms
5:32
yeah so uh we we started to uh have some
5:37
interesting phenomenon where we would be
5:39
mixing two powders and you'd expect a
5:42
powder to to flow or at least flow it
5:45
may need a lot of pushing but at least
5:47
the flow and as we were mixing a couple
5:50
of these powders it formed a like
5:53
concrete we didn't add any water and so
5:57
that brought us down the road of trying
6:00
to understand how could we how could we
6:02
characterize our materials to understand
6:04
them
6:05
and uh early brainstorms were that we
6:10
would need to partner with someone
6:11
within Academia and that it might be
6:14
someone to get their their master's
6:16
degree or maybe a PhD as they would work
6:19
with collecting isotherms with saturated
6:22
Salt Solutions
6:24
so that was some of our understanding a
6:27
few years ago
6:28
we were aware of instruments that would
6:33
help um
6:34
collect that data
6:36
but usually the price tag or what we
6:40
were able to determine from it wasn't as
6:42
uh
6:43
readily available or in intuitive to us
6:48
so it took us a little bit to uh to make
6:50
the decision of what was the best uh
6:52
piece of equipment to serve our needs
6:54
and what was the driving force behind
6:57
that decision when did your team you
6:59
know see the return on investment that
7:02
that pushed you forward to looking at
7:04
Water activity as well as isotherms
7:07
yeah so um I think some of the research
7:09
comes out of uh University of Illinois
7:11
out of uh Shelley Schmitz group where
7:15
they could
7:16
uh Zachary as as you uh presented to us
7:19
were one of your CL after you collected
7:22
the absorption portion of uh of the
7:25
moist absorption isotherm that you can
7:28
plot oh and get that that curve fit to
7:32
it and then understand where that curve
7:34
fit may be making some changes and
7:36
relate that to
7:38
physical changes happening within a bulk
7:40
solid
7:41
once we were able to make those
7:43
connections then we were able to you
7:47
know make the decisions that we're
7:48
interested in making
7:50
and you mentioned the the equipment
7:52
earlier the aqualab vapor absorption
7:54
analyzer how would you explain that
7:56
equipment to somebody who's never used
7:58
it what is it and what does it do for
8:01
your team
8:02
yeah so we we uh as we're working with
8:05
different ingredients you can think of
8:07
them as as you know spices or or flour
8:10
or sugar
8:12
and we're able to uh take a sample we
8:16
understand what its loss on drying value
8:18
is
8:19
and we can put that within the
8:20
instrument and then we can understand as
8:23
as the conditions around it in this case
8:25
water activity the humidity of of air
8:29
changes
8:30
the moisture content of that material
8:32
may change
8:34
and that's what we measure
8:37
to to get our moisture absorption
8:38
isotherms
8:40
and what are some of the other
8:42
advantages of using isotherms you you
8:44
mentioned looking at products or
8:47
different powders and mixing them are
8:50
you doing any types of simulations of of
8:51
new formulations or looking at shelf
8:53
life or anything else with these
8:55
isotherms
8:56
yeah and that's uh as I uh mentioned
9:00
with some of the other um
9:02
instruments that we're looking at
9:04
going back some years when we're trying
9:06
to make our decision
9:08
it would be pretty neat we could see
9:10
what the instrument could do and then we
9:12
would look at it and be like well now we
9:14
have giant Excel files full of data and
9:18
we didn't have something that could do
9:20
some of the calculations for us I have
9:23
the privilege of working with some
9:25
people that have a food science food
9:27
engineering background whether it's a
9:29
master's or PhD
9:30
they'll mention to me some of the
9:32
classes they've taken and a test maybe
9:35
one or two or three problems and the
9:38
problem would be something like you have
9:39
a couple ingredients at different water
9:41
activities calculate what their final
9:43
water activity may be
9:45
and that would be I don't know a couple
9:47
hour final or something
9:50
so to do these calculations can be
9:53
um tricky and uh when we're able to see
9:58
and make use of what comes with the
10:01
vapor absorption analyzer where we can
10:03
use the moisture analysis toolkit
10:07
we're able to make some of these
10:09
predictions right so we can understand
10:11
shelf life
10:13
and understand how
10:15
package characteristics may affect that
10:17
and how Warehouse conditions may affect
10:20
that
10:21
and that's a really good point if you
10:23
try to do these calculations by yourself
10:24
they they can take a really long time
10:26
hours if you're doing it on a test and
10:29
that's what we were doing here at meter
10:30
we basically had Excel spreadsheets and
10:33
we were trying to do these calculations
10:34
but we realize there's a lot of value
10:36
Behind these calculations and being able
10:38
to do them very quickly and and I think
10:41
the the VSA The Vapor absorption
10:43
analyzer is kind of just half of the
10:45
solution the other half is that moisture
10:47
analysis toolkit software that that
10:49
you're using and when you combine the
10:52
data with the right tool and the right
10:54
calculators I've noticed that it's
10:55
really helped to speed up the r d
10:58
process and and that's what it sounds
11:00
like your team is using it for mainly in
11:03
r d is that correct
11:06
yeah we do we do use it within our our r
11:09
d to inform our our uh Partners within
11:13
manufacturing certainly yes
11:16
and how do you plan on using the VSA for
11:19
some of your future projects what what
11:21
does the future look like for you and
11:22
how do you plan to use this equipment
11:25
well as we mentioned to to be able to
11:28
you know as as we're discovering new
11:31
ways of mixing materials so that as
11:34
we're serving our our customers within
11:36
the pet food community
11:39
it's understanding will some of these
11:41
materials mix well or will they have
11:44
some challenges
11:45
and understanding also as you mix them
11:48
depending what packaging you put them in
11:50
will they be free-flowing or will they
11:53
have some sort of challenges
11:56
so as we're able to measure water
11:59
activity we're able to maintain the
12:02
safety of a product right we don't want
12:04
something to
12:05
to Clump we don't want something to
12:09
develop mold or anything like that so it
12:13
provides the the framework
12:17
to make these production predictions
12:19
then we can run a shelf life study to
12:22
confirm yes Iran as expected or not and
12:25
then we can make some adjustments from
12:27
there
12:28
and do you see any application of this
12:30
instrument to other departments in Kim
12:32
and I know Kim and makes all types of of
12:34
products now that you've worked with the
12:36
instrument would you ever recommend a
12:39
colleague or somebody else at Kim and
12:41
trying out this technology for similar
12:44
Solutions yeah certainly um this is
12:46
something that that uh almost everyone
12:49
within came in is aware and this is
12:51
something that we're moving
12:53
I
12:54
to see to see what the the energy I
12:58
think it's what your colleague is it
12:59
John Russell
13:01
and as as he mentioned in a earlier
13:03
podcast we're talking about
13:05
understanding the energy of water
13:07
and when you understand what that the
13:10
energy of free water is then you can
13:12
make
13:13
all these all these you know valuable
13:15
decisions of is that free water going to
13:18
help support micro growth right you
13:20
won't want to have mold or bacteria
13:21
growing in your sample
13:24
or will it cause something to have
13:27
further reactions
13:30
so that's something that yeah most of
13:32
most of my co-workers are are well aware
13:35
throughout yep so we yes and and part of
13:39
the reason I asked that Greg is because
13:40
I see a lot of teams get this instrument
13:43
and get a lot of value out of it but I
13:45
don't always see the entire company
13:47
knowing about the benefit of of
13:49
isotherms for example and how a lot of
13:52
different teams could uh benefit from it
13:54
we yeah so we um
13:58
it's you know as as as were how to say
14:01
as as Kevin is always moving forward and
14:05
figuring out the best ways to serve our
14:06
customers
14:08
we are making use of of that of the data
14:12
that we can get from it and so that
14:14
means it's my partners that are serving
14:16
people within the AG industry
14:20
and and people serving within um our
14:23
health and nutrition side
14:25
for supplements or or material things
14:28
for Eye Health yes certainly
14:31
um these ingredients have been
14:34
yeah are being characterized so that we
14:37
can provide the best solutions for our
14:39
customers and it sounds like your team
14:41
has a really good communication Network
14:42
so that if if a piece of equipment or
14:45
solution is working somewhere you know
14:47
it sounds like where everyone knows yeah
14:49
it's it's uh
14:51
it's a yeah a good um collaborative
14:53
campus that in in Des Moines yes
14:58
and it's a good family within a good
15:01
family company yes well this kind of
15:03
leads straight into my next question is
15:05
what drives you to continue to be part
15:08
of the team at Chemin but it sounds like
15:10
this is part of it is is there anything
15:11
else that you would add to that
15:13
yeah I think for for me thinking back to
15:17
what drove me to chemistry and what you
15:19
know just the the The Wonder of of doing
15:24
um reactions and experiments and then
15:27
what you know kept me going within
15:28
graduate school is being able to collect
15:31
useful data from instruments
15:33
so
15:35
um there's just something I'm not saying
15:37
if this is something that most people
15:39
drive Joy but it's something that that
15:42
certainly brings me joy
15:44
and uh in a previous conversation you
15:47
mentioned the idea of maybe having your
15:49
own podcast through Chemin and I'm just
15:51
curious if if you were to move forward
15:53
what would that podcast look like would
15:55
you be interviewing people like Chemin
15:56
would you be interviewing other other
15:58
scientists uh what would it look like
16:01
yeah might be something that we do
16:03
within Chemin yeah some of my co-workers
16:06
have continued to tease me about about
16:08
doing something like that maybe kind of
16:11
like how how we're doing this Zachary to
16:13
talk about what are some of the
16:15
opportunities of of
16:17
how do we use this equipment and then
16:20
just to say hey this is how we how we
16:22
make use of
16:24
this equipment of isotherms
16:26
understanding ingredients understanding
16:27
how dynamic
16:30
materials can be even if you can you
16:32
know you open up maybe a bag of flour
16:34
and you're like it's just flour and I'm
16:36
gonna go bake some
16:37
whatever a cake with it or something
16:40
and it's it's truly a lot more going on
16:43
well I just want to say thank you Greg I
16:45
know we've been trying to get you on
16:47
here a long time and we got through some
16:48
technical difficulties and things and I
16:50
I really appreciate your insights about
16:52
the vapor absorption analyzer and I uh
16:55
look forward to continuing seeing how
16:56
your team uses this in pet food but
16:58
maybe also other products as well so
17:00
thank you so much for coming on the
17:02
podcast we really appreciate you
17:04
thank you so much Zachary I really
17:07
appreciate this
17:08
I'm Zachary Cartwright this is water and
17:10
food
17:12
find this podcast on Apple iTunes
17:14
Spotify or wherever you listen to
17:16
podcasts

 

 

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