A microwave oven is a kitchen appliance
employing microwave radiation primarily to cook or heat food.
History
Cooking food with microwaves was discovered by Percy Spencer while building
magnetrons for radar sets at Raytheon. He was working on an active radar set
when he noticed a strange sensation, and saw that a peanut bar he had in his
pocket started to cook. Although he was not the first to notice this phenomenon,
as the holder of 120 patents, Spencer was no stranger to discovery and
experiment, and realized what was happening. The first food to be deliberately
cooked with microwaves was popcorn, and the second was an egg (which exploded in
the face of one of the experimenters).
In 1946 Raytheon patented the microwave cooking process and in 1947, the company
built the first microwave oven, the Radarange. It was almost 6 feet (1.8 m) tall
and weighed 750 pounds (340 kg). It was water-cooled and produced 3000 watts,
about three times the amount of radiation produced by microwave ovens today. An
early commercial model introduced in 1954 generated 1600 watts and sold for
$2,000 to $3,000. Raytheon licensed its technology to the Tappan Stove company
in 1952. They tried to market a large, 220 volt, wall unit as a home microwave
oven in 1955 for a price of $1,295, but it did not sell well. In 1965 Raytheon
acquired Amana, which introduced the first popular home model, the countertop
Radarange in 1967 at a price point of $495.
In the 1960s, Litton bought Studebaker's Franklin Manufacturing assets, which
had been manufacturing magnetrons and building and selling microwave ovens
similar to the Radarange.
Litton then developed a new configuration of the microwave, the short, wide
shape that is now common. The magnetron feed was also unique. This resulted in
an oven that could survive a no-load condition indefinitely. The new oven was
shown at a trade show in Chicago, and helped begin a rapid growth of the market
for home microwave ovens. Sales figures of 40,000 units for the US industry in
1970 grew to one million by 1975. Market penetration in Japan, which had learned
to build less expensive units by re-engineering a cheaper magnetron, was more
rapid.
A number of other companies joined in the market, and for a time most systems
were built by defense contractors, who were the most familiar with the
magnetron. Litton was particularly well known in the restaurant business. By the
late 1970s the technology had improved to the point where prices were falling
rapidly. Formerly found only in large industrial applications, "microwaves" were
increasingly becoming a standard fixture of most kitchens. The rapidly falling
price of microprocessors also helped by adding electronic controls to make the
ovens easier to use. By the late 1980s they were almost universal, and current
estimates hold that nearly 95% of American households have a microwave.
Description
A microwave oven consists of:
a magnetron,
a magnetron control circuit (usually with a microcontroller),
a waveguide, and
a cooking chamber
A microwave oven works by passing microwave radiation, usually at a frequency of
2450 MHz (a wavelength of 12.24 cm), through the food. Water, fat, and sugar
molecules in the food absorb energy from the microwave beam in a process called
dielectric heating. Most molecules are electric dipoles, meaning that they have
a positive charge at one end and a negative charge at the other, and therefore
vibrate as they try to align themselves with the alternating electric field
induced by the microwave beam. This molecular movement creates heat. Microwave
heating is most efficient on liquid water, and much less so on fats, sugars, and
frozen water. Microwave heating is sometimes incorrectly explained as resonance
of water molecules, which only occurs at much higher frequencies, in the tens of
gigahertz.
The cooking chamber itself is a Faraday cage enclosure to prevent the microwaves
escaping into the surroundings. The oven door is usually a glass panel for easy
viewing, but has a layer of conductive mesh to maintain the shielding. Since the
mesh width is much less than the wavelength of 12 cm, the microwave radiation
can not pass through the door, while visible light (with a much shorter
wavelength) can.
Professional chefs generally find microwave ovens to be of limited usefulness.
On the other hand, people who are lacking in free time, or not comfortable with
their cooking skills, can use microwave ovens to reheat stored food (including
commercially available pre-cooked frozen dishes) in only a few minutes.
With wireless computer networks gaining in popularity, microwave interference
has become a concern near wireless networks. Microwave ovens are capable of
disrupting wireless network transmissions because the oven generates radio waves
of about 2450 MHz, near the 802.11b/g frequency band.
A variant of the conventional microwave is the convection microwave. A
convection microwave is a combination of a standard microwave and a convection
oven. It allows food cooked to be cooked quickly, yet come out browned or
crisped, as from a convection oven. Convection microwaves are more expensive
than a conventional microwave. They are not considered cost-effective if
primarily used just to heat drinks or frozen food. They are usually used for
cooking a prepared dish.
Efficiency
A microwave oven does not convert all electrical energy into microwaves. A
typical consumer microwave oven consumes 1100 W but delivers only 700 W of
microwave power. The remaining 400 W are dissipated as heat by components of the
oven. The main source of energy loss is the magnetron tube, which is much less
than 100% efficient at generating microwave output from the power source. Lesser
amounts of power are consumed by the oven lamp, AC power transformer losses,
magnetron cooling fan, food turntable motor and control circuits. This waste
heat does not end up in the food but is mostly expelled from the cooling vents
on the oven and heats the air in the kitchen.
Of the microwave power that the oven generates, about 77% is typically used to
heat the food, compared with 10% to 60% in conventional ovens. (Data collected
by boiling water in microwave and measuring temperature change.)
Safety and controversy
Microwaving food is fast and popular, but there are potential hazards.
Uneven heating
Food is heated for so short a time that it is often cooked unevenly. Microwave
ovens are frequently used for reheating previously cooked food, and bacterial
contamination may not be killed by the reheating, resulting in food-borne
illness. The uneven heating is partly due to the uneven distribution of
microwave energy inside the oven, and partly due to the different rates of
energy absorption in different parts of the food. The first problem is reduced
by a stirrer, a type of fan that reflects microwave energy to different parts of
the oven as it rotates, and by a turntable that turns the food. The second
problem must be addressed by the cook, who should arrange the food so that it
absorbs energy evenly, and periodically test and shield any parts of the food
that overheat.
In some materials with low thermal conductivity, where dielectric constant
increases with temperature, microwave heating can cause localized thermal
runaway.
Acute dangers
Liquids, when heated in a microwave oven in a container with a smooth surface,
can superheat; that is, reach temperatures that are a few degrees Celsius above
their normal boiling point without actually boiling. The boiling process can
start explosively when the liquid is disturbed, such as when the operator grabs
hold of the container to take it out of the oven, which can result in severe
burns. A common myth states that only distilled water can exhibit this behavior;
this is not true. [1]
Closed containers and eggs can explode when heated in a microwave oven due to
the pressure build-up of steam. Products that are heated too long can catch
fire. Manuals of microwave ovens warn of such hazards.
A microwaved DVD-R showing the effects of electrical discharge through its metal
filmTin foil, aluminium foil, ceramics decorated with metal, and products
containing other metals can cause sparks when they are used in a microwave.
Microwaving small, smooth, solid metal objects without pointed ends (for
example, a spoon) can sometimes be safe, and usually does not produce sparking.
Forks, however, will readily produce sparks when placed in the microwave. This
is because while it acts as an antenna, absorbing microwave radiation just like
other metal objects such as the spoon, the pointed ends of the fork will act to
concentrate the electric field formed at the tips. This has the effect of
exceeding the dielectric breakdown gradient of air, about 3 megavolts per meter
(3×106V/m), causing sparks to form. This effect is directly analogous to the
effect of St. Elmo's fire.
The effect can be seen clearly on a CD or DVD which has been cooked in a
microwave. When the electrical field builds up sufficiently, the resulting
discharge vaporizes the metal film in the disc leaving a visible pattern of
concentric and radial scars. The size of this pattern is directly proportional
to the wavelength of the microwave radiation.
The formation of sparks on sharp metal objects may be prevented by placing the
utensil in some food or liquid while in the microwave, as this has the effect of
preferentially conductively dissipating the charge before the electric fields
can build to the point where they exceed the breakdown value of air. Any time
dielectric breakdown occurs in air, some ozone and nitrogen oxides are formed,
both of which are toxic. Finally, as mentioned previously, any metal or
conductive object placed into the microwave will act as an antenna, and its
electrons will thus be thrashed back and forth through the object (a high
frequency alternating current) causing some ohmic heating to occur. The extent
of this heating effect will vary depending on the size, shape and conductivity
of the object.
A microwave oven with a metal shelfSeveral microwave fires have been noted where
Chinese takeout boxes with a metal handle are microwaved, and also where
"homemade" microwave popcorn bags have been sealed using a metal staple, which
is then heated and sets fire to the bag. This type of accident can pose a
dangerous situation because of the extremely flamable mixture of popcorn and oil
in the bag. Thus, it is good practice to remove any metal utensils or metal
containing objects from a microwave oven before operating it, as the behavior of
these objects when immersed in a strong microwave radiation field is
unpredictable.
It is a common myth that metallic kitchen equipment, like kitchen forks and
knives, can somehow repel the microwaves back into the magnetron and cause it to
catch fire. This is highly unlikely.
Controversial hazards
Radiation
Some people are concerned with being exposed to the microwave radiation. The USA
legal limit of leaking radiation is 1 mW/cm2 at 5 cm from a new oven (for a used
oven, it is 5 times higher). It is rare for an oven to exceed these limits. As a
comparison, a GSM mobile phone may emit up to 1 W at 1800 MHz, which is 2 mW/cm2
at 5 cm. Whether or not cellular phones are hazardous to the health is also
controversial.
Microwave ovens produced after 1971 must meet the Food and Drug Association
safety requirements for radiation leakage; less than 5mW/cm2 at approximately
two inches from the surface of the oven. This is far below the exposure known to
be harmful to human health.
The radiation produced by a microwave oven is non-ionizing. As such, it does not
have the same cancer risks associated with ionizing radiation such as X-rays and
ultraviolet.
Food
Idli being prepared in a microwave oven.Some people claim that there exist more
subtle dangers than the ones listed above associated with cooking in a microwave
oven. These are:
that microwave cooking causes more loss of nutrients than conventional cooking,
and
that microwave radiation leads to chemical reactions in the food that are
different from those occurring during conventional heating and which can cause
cancer or other ill effects if consumed, particularly due to the formation of a
group of suspected carcinogens called d-nitrosodienthanolamines.
After World War II, the Soviet Union's Institute of Radio Technology
investigated German microwave cooking technology and observed several key
harmful effects of microwaves, prompting the country to ban the use of
microwaves in 1976.
Food scientist Dr Hans Ulrich Hertel and Bernard Blanc of the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology teamed up in 1989 to research the effects of eating
microwaved food in humans by comparing blood samples. They compared the blood of
the subjects before and after eating food that had been microwaved versus food
that had been cooked conventionally. Their research concluded that the food
itself and the blood of the subjects suffered serious irregularities.
Here are some examples of anti-microwave websites. Most claims made on these
websites lack any scientific value, such as their explanations of
electromagnetic radiation.
The source of this article is
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