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. 2014 Aug 7;9(8):e102913. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0102913

Table 1. Fracture forces of different seed coats, nut shells and hard inner drupe shells (endocarp, “fruit stone”); all specimens were tested in compression in the as-received state without additional drying with a cross-head speed of 5 mm/min.

species shell moisturecontent (wt%) n Diameter(mm) length(mm) mean shellthickness t (mm) fracture forceF frac (N) maximum fractureforce F frac, max (N) Ffrac/t (N/mm)
peanut 2.0±0.5 10 15.9±0.9 47.9±1.9 1.2 76±20 117 63±17
pecan 5.5±0.9 10 23.3±1.1 44.7±3.5 1.2 323±114 433 269±95
walnut 5.1±0.3 10 28.2±0.5 35.9±1.8 1.6 378±165 72 236±103
hazelnut 5.5±0.1 10 21.7±0.3 23.4±1.3 1.5 431±127 729 288±85
almond 4.9±0.1 10 21.0±1.3 35.2±1.7 3.2 895±181 1221 280±57
Macadamia seed 10.1±0.7 34 23.7±1.3 23.8±1.3 2.3 2364±645 3926 1016±179

They were oriented with their sutures vertical to the loading direction and their shorter dimension parallel to the loading direction ( fig. 1 ). “n” denotes the number of specimens tested. All values are mean values plus/minus standard deviations, if not denoted otherwise.