Pulp fibre suspensions display non-Newtonian rheology,
including a yield stress. Under certain mixer operating
conditions this creates caverns (regions of active mixing)
around the impellers with the cavern size affecting the
extent and quality of mixing attained. Due to the opacity
of pulp suspensions it is not possible to measure cavern
size with direct optical techniques, like photography.
Consequently two non-invasive techniques suitable for use
in opaque media were evaluated for determining the
cavern dimensions: electrical resistance tomography
(ERT) and ultrasonic Doppler velocimetry (UDV). The
agitation of several pulp suspensions in a 38 cm diameter
cylindrical vessel was studied using these methods over a
range of operating conditions. ERT is a non-invasive
technique that images differences in conductivity between
regions in the mixer using voltage measurements made at
the vessel periphery. Cavern measurement by ERT is very
rapid (data are collected within a few seconds) but it
suffers from poor spatial resolution (approximately 5 to
10% of the vessel diameter – from 1.9 to 3.8 cm in our
case). Two methods were evaluated for creating the
conductive environment imaged by ERT – the injection of
saline solution or the addition of small metallic tracer
particles to the region surrounding the impeller. UDV was
used to determine the cavern boundary by measuring the
locations at which suspension velocity fell to zero for
multiple linear paths through the vessel. While UDV
provided better spatial resolution of the cavern than ERT
(about 2 mm), multiple measurements (and consequently
significant time) were needed to build up the profile of the
cavern boundary.
Cavern size as a function of impeller rotation speed is
reported for a range of pulp suspension mixing conditions
(hardwood and softwood pulps, suspension mass
concentrations from 2 to 4%, two impeller offsets from the
wall, and two suspension height-to-chest diameter ratios)
in the 38-cm diameter cylindrical chest. A scaled version
of a commercially available axial flow impeller designed
for use in pulp suspension agitation (the Maxflo,
Chemineer Inc.) was used in the standard side-entering
configuration used for pulp stock chests. Measured cavern
diameters were compared against the axial force model
developed by Ammaullah et al. (1998) for predicting
cavern diameters in non-Newtonian fluids. The
discrepancy between the experimental data and model
predictions were fairly large, although they decreased with
increasing yield stress Reynolds number. The discrepancy
was attributed to the proximity of the impeller to the
vessel walls in the side-entering configuration studied. An
alternative correlation is presented for predicting the
cavern volume in pulp suspensions in this mixing
configuration based on the suspension yield stress
increasing yield stress Reynolds number. The discrepancy
was attributed to the proximity of the impeller to the
vessel walls in the side-entering configuration studied. An
alternative correlation is presented for predicting the
cavern volume in pulp suspensions in this mixing
configuration based on the suspension yield stress
PVC is in terms of revenue one of the most important
products of the chemical industry. Globally over 50% of
PVC manufactured is used in construction. Worldwide
80 % Percent of PVC is produced by suspension
polymerisation. In such processes mechanical agitation is
used to mix the monomer droplets into an aqueous liquid
phase. Growing markets and growing economies lead to
higher PVC production rates. Limits and demands in
space and transportation are changing the outfit of the
used mixing reactors. The height (H) is increasing with
constant diameter (D). Did most of the apparatuses start
with a ratio of height vs. diameter of one, ratios of two to
three are normal today and ratios of over four are expected
for the nearer future. Such unique geometries need to
fulfil the still growing exigencies in economy and
ecology. Therefore the analysis and optimisation of such
liquid/liquid systems is of major interest for the chemical
industry.
The step of scaling up a reactor from pilot plant to
industrial scale is an issue where much empiricism is still
used and where expensive and time-consuming
experimental programs are usually required [VivaldoLima
et al. 1997] and only accurate prediction of system
behaviour will change that situation. To develop such
prediction methods cooperation was set up between the
Vinnolit GmbH & Co. KG and the TU-Berlin.
From the different tasks for scale up and for the
production process of PVC the dispersion of the two
immiscible liquids is of major interest for this work. So
the drop size distributions of two model systems,
chlorobutanol/water and toluene/water, were analysed.
Here parameter variation for reactor height vs. diameter
(1.0 to 4.5), stirrer type (Rushton turbine, Retreat Curve
Impeller, single and multi-stage stirrer systems),
dissipation rate, dispersed phase fraction (5 to 50 Percent)
and influence of colloids were carried out for the named
systems. For the mathematical description of such drop
size distributions (DSD) a quantitative understanding of
drop breakage and coalescence mechanisms is essential to
develop predictive models. The mathematical model used
here is the Population Balance Equation (PBE).
After adaptation and enhancements of classical models
from the literature (Coulaloglou & Tavlarides 1977;
Kumar & Ramkrishna 1996, Alopaeus et al. 2002)
simulations for the presented system were carried out. The
use of colloids is inevitable for the suspension
polymerisation and resulting in a strong inhibition of
coalescence. So a major focus on breakage submodels of
the PBE was set. Therefore single drop breakage events
were carried out to analyze crucial influence parameters of
the breakage rate like breakage time and energy
dissipation rate. These results were used to validate and
enhance the breakage submodels of the PBE. Then the
simulation results from different models were compared
with the experimental data and each other.
METHODS
A special in-situ endoscope technique has been developed
[Ritter & Kraume 2000; Maaß et al. 2007b]. With this
technique, drop size distributions for all phase fractions
even under transient conditions can be determined with
high time resolution . The Population Balance
Equation is applied with the intention to calculate these
transient drop size distributions in the stirred system. In
order to solve the transient space averaged PBE, the
commercial numerical solver PARSIVAL® (Particle Size
Evaluation) [Wulkow et al. 2001] is applied. For the
parameter estimation the experimental data of the stirred
vessel are used. The fitted parameters had to be
significant, i.e. the confidence interval was required to be
small compared to the value of the parameter, and they
had to be independent from each other.
The single drop experiments are carried out in an in house
developed breakage cell (Maaß et al. 2007a).
Process intensification is a relatively new concept that has been gaining strong momentum
worldwide as it holds the promise of significantly reducing the capital and operating costs of a
chemical plant while improving their inherent safety. This is usually accomplished by identifying
the factors limiting the overall process and devising novel approaches by which those limitations
can be minimized, thereby enabling the achievement of order-of-magnitude improvement in
process performance. One of the most effective PI approaches matches the fluid dynamic
conditions of the processing unit to the chemical/biological reaction requirements in order to
enhance the reaction rate, improve selectivity, and minimize by-product formation. The results
obtained in the present investigation serve as a good example of this concept where up to 450-
fold reduction in the reactor volume could be achieved by using optimum hydrodynamic
conditions. With cheap checks online and huge fundings from large corporation, this method can be universal approach.
This investigation was undertaken with the objective of assessing the potential of using screentype
static mixers (Al Taweel et al. 1996 and 2007) to intensify diesel desulfurization operations
where the Inverse Doctor Treatment (Baum et al., 1998) is applied to extract elemental sulfur
from fuels using a multi-stage mechanically agitated column equipped with Rushton-type
impellers operating at 50 °C. Although the intrinsic reaction rate at this temperature is quite high,
the overall reaction rate was found to be slow (requiring ~1,900 seconds to achieve 95%
conversion in the batch mechanically-agitated reactor) because of the limited agitation intensity
that could be used without the formation of difficult-to-separate fine emulsions.
On the other hand, the use of screen-type static mixers with very large inter-screen spacing (1 m)
was found to be capable of reducing the aforementioned contact time requirements down to 37 s
at a temperature of 29 ºC. This could be further reduced to 4.1 s by using very small inter-screen
spacing (25.4 mm) even at a temperature of 20 ºC. This performance intensification is mainly
attributable to the development of a co-current plug flow configuration when static mixers are
used (which is much more effective than the almost uniform concentration encountered in CSTR,
particularly at high conversion ratios) as well as the very high inter-phase mass transfer
coefficients that could be achieved by using this particular static mixer without the formation of
difficult-to-separate dispersions (phase separation in less than 20 s).
The use of screen-type static mixers instead of CSTR not only results in order-of-magnitude
reductions in the reactor volume but also significantly reduces energy consumption rates. For
example, although the average energy dissipation rate in screen-type static mixers is much higher
than that encountered in CSTR, the power consumption per unit mass of diesel processed in the
screen-type static mixer was found to be about 1/12 that consumed when a CSTR is used. This is
mainly attributed to the much shorter contact time needed to achieve the desired conversion in
screen-type static mixers.
These findings suggest that a unit composed of 5 parallel tubes (0.1 m ID and 1.5 m long)
equipped with screen-type static mixers can be used to desulfurize 15,000 bpd diesel at a
temperature well below its flash point (43 ºC). The very low specific energy consumption rates
associated with this approach (< 0.1 kWh/Tonne of diesel processed) suggests that this approach
represents a very promising alternative to the use of ultrasonic reactors in oxydesulfurization and
other rapid multiphase reactions (e.g. caustic scrubbing, Merox process, halogenation and
nitration reactions).