Global Solutions for the Food Industry

How to Calculate Retort Loading Capacity

1. Confirm Retort Effective Volume First

 
First check the effective working volume of your retort (not the total outer volume).
 
  • Horizontal retort / vertical retort official parameter: marked as L or m³
  • Conversion formula:
     
    1 m³ = 1000 L
 
This is the basic data for all loading calculations.
 

2. Standard Loading Ratio (Industry Universal Standard)

 
Recommended safe loading range for food sterilization:
 
  • Optimal loading rate: 70% – 80%
  • Maximum allowable loading rate: ≤ 90%
  • Minimum loading rate: ≥ 5% (avoid small load effect)
 

3. Step-by-Step Calculation Formula

 

Formula 1: Calculate reasonable loading volume

 
Reasonable Loading Volume = Retort Effective Volume × Loading Rate
 

Formula 2: Calculate product weight per batch

 
Batch Loading Weight = Reasonable Loading Volume × Product Bulk Density
 

Simple Example

 
If retort effective volume: 1000L
 
  • Optimal loading volume:
 
1000L × 70% = 700L
 
1000L × 80% = 800L
 
  • Max loading volume:
     
    1000L × 90% = 900L
 

4. Different Product Bulk Density Reference

 
It is used to convert volume into actual loading weight.
 
  • Vacuum pouch food (meat, snacks, braised food): ~0.7–0.8 kg/L
  • Glass bottle / tin can products: ~1.0–1.2 kg/L
  • Tray ready meals / soft containers: ~0.6–0.7 kg/L
  • Sauce and liquid food: Do not exceed 2/3 of container single volume
 

5. Cage & Layer Frame Restriction Calculation

 
Most retorts use trolley and layer baskets for loading.
 
  1. Count total layers of the retort trolley
  2. Calculate the quantity of single layer placement
  3. Total batch quantity = Single layer quantity × Total layers
 
This method is more accurate for fixed specification products, directly controlling loading quantity to avoid overloading.
 

6. Core Calculation Principles & Notes

 
  1. Leave circulation gaps between products, layers and retort inner wall; gaps cannot be counted as loading space.
  2. Loading calculation must guarantee smooth circulation of hot water or steam to ensure uniform temperature.
  3. Do not only calculate weight; volume occupancy is the key factor affecting sterilization effect.
  4. When the product specification changes, recalculate the loading rate to prevent insufficient F value or overheating.
Share the Post: