kuivmassi
Kuivmassi, often translated as dry mass, refers to the portion of a material that remains after all water has been removed. It represents the true mass of non-volatile constituents and is used to compare samples with differing moisture contents. The dry mass is typically determined by drying a sample in an oven at a specified temperature until a constant weight is reached, most commonly 105°C for 24 hours, in accordance with standard proximate analysis methods. Alternative methods include freeze-drying or the use of moisture analyzers that estimate water loss in real time.
The dry-mass fraction is calculated as the mass of the dried sample divided by the original mass,
Applications include evaluating forage quality, cereal grain composition, food labeling, and substrate characterization in fermentation or
Limitations include loss or transformation of volatile constituents during drying, potential incomplete removal of water if
See also: moisture content, oven-drying, proximate analysis, dry matter basis.