Scale-up study of aerated coaxial mixing reactors containing non-newtonian power-law fluids: Analysis of gas holdup, cavity size, and power consumption

2022; Elsevier BV; Volume: 113; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jiec.2022.06.004

ISSN

1876-794X

Autores

Ali Rahimzadeh, Farhad Ein‐Mozaffari, Ali Lohi,

Tópico(s)

Drilling and Well Engineering

Resumo

• For the first time the scale-up of an aerated coaxial mixer has been conducted. • By keeping the impeller tip speed and anchor impeller rotational speed constant, the flow regime of the coaxial mixer remained consistent for varied scales. • The optimum anchor impeller speed for scale-up of the coaxial mixer was determined. • The effect of the aeration rates on scale-up of the coaxial mixer was analyzed. • A new correlation was proposed to predict the gassed power consumption of the coaxial mixer. The use of coaxial mixers has significantly improved gas dispersion in non-Newtonian fluids. However, to the best of our knowledge, no scale-up investigation of an aerated coaxial mixer has been reported in the literature. This study aims to explore the gas hold-up, energy dissipation rate, power consumption and cavity size in order to provide the guideline for scaling-up of the coaxial mixers. Through the use of computational fluid dynamics and electrical resistance tomography, the effects of the aeration rate, central impeller type, rotating mode, impeller speed, and pumping direction on the gas dispersion efficacy in both small-scale and large-scale coaxial mixers containing non-Newtonian fluids were investigated. For the coaxial mixer in the co-rotating mode, the same flow regime was achieved when the central impeller tip speed and the anchor impeller rotational speed were kept constant in both small-scale and large-scale systems. It was observed that maintaining the aeration rate per volume of the non-Newtonian fluid constant was beneficial to preserve the performance of the large-scale coaxial mixer the same as its small-scale counterpart. The use of specific power consumption as a scale up criterion effectively improved the energy dissipation rate uniformity, which is critical for shear sensitive applications.

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