fjlip, I think Tom is closer to correct on this matter. Cooling the grain
down to safer storage temps is how aeration helps with grain storage the
most. Grain will have to give up moisture as it's cooled just because as it
cools, the RH of the air surrounding the kernels in the bin has to rise.
Any time you can push air into a bin that has lower RH than the air in it,
you're doing some amount of drying with the air exchange. Once the grain is
cooled to the ambient night time temps, blowing more air through it is
probably just wasting energy.
Any supplemental heat you can give the air that doesn't also raise the
water content of it is going to lower the RH of that air and speed drying.
down to safer storage temps is how aeration helps with grain storage the
most. Grain will have to give up moisture as it's cooled just because as it
cools, the RH of the air surrounding the kernels in the bin has to rise.
Any time you can push air into a bin that has lower RH than the air in it,
you're doing some amount of drying with the air exchange. Once the grain is
cooled to the ambient night time temps, blowing more air through it is
probably just wasting energy.
Any supplemental heat you can give the air that doesn't also raise the
water content of it is going to lower the RH of that air and speed drying.
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