16,387 research outputs found
Gas-liquid hydrodynamics in Taylor Flows with complex liquids
Universitá di Pisa
Facoltá di Ingegneria
Dipartimento di Ingegneria Chimica, Chimica Industriale e Scienza dei Materiali
Relazione di tirocinio
in Ingegneria Chimica
Gas-liquid hydrodynamics in Taylor Flows with complex liquids
Il candidato:
Federico Alberini
Il relatore: Prof. Elisabetta Brunazzi
Controrelatore:
Prof. Ing. Roberto Mauri
Anno Accademico 2009-201
Application of the double optic probe technique to distorted tumbling bubbles in aqueous or organic liquid
The optic probe technique is widely used to investigate bubble reactors. To derive values of bubble local velocities and bubble local sizes, a specific signal treatment is usually applied under severe assumptions for bubble path and shape. However, in most industrial
reactors, bubble motion is chaotic and no common shape can be assumed.
In this work, the reliability of the signal treatment associated with the optic probe technique is examined for distorted and tumbling bubbles. A double-tip optic probe is settled in a glass tank and the rise of bubbles is filmed simultaneously. Several trains of bubbles are
studied, interactions between bubbles being gradually increased.
Referring to image analysis, several ways to derive mean bubble velocities from optic probe data have been compared. Crenels from front tipand rear tipra w signals are associated and individual bubble velocities are derived. Nevertheless, complete velocity distributions
are difficult to obtain, as they depend on the choice of the time within which the bubble is searched on the second tip. Using a simpler approach it is shown that the most probable velocity, calculated through the raw signals inter-correlation, is a correct estimation of the
average bubble velocity.
Concerning bubble size, bubble chord distributions show too high values due to bubble distortion and deviation. A simplified estimation of bubble mean Sauter diameter, using the most reliable measurements only (i.e., local gas hold-up, local mean bubbling frequency, and
most probable bubble velocity), was tested for highly distorted bubbles; this method was validated both in water and cyclohexane
A multiscale model for conceptual design and simulation of a carbothermic reduction process for aluminium production
Simulation of coalescence, break up and mass transfer in bubble columns by using the Conditional Quadrature Method of Moments in OpenFOAM
The evaluation of the mass transfer rates and the fluid-dynamics aspects of bubble columns are strongly affected by the intrinsic poly-dispersity of the gas phase, namely the different dispersed bubbles are usually distributed over a certain range of size and chemical composition values. In our previous work, gas-liquid systems were investigated by coupling Computational Fluid Dynamics with mono-variate population balance models (PBM) solved by using the quadrature method of moments (QMOM). Since mass transfer rates depend not only on bubble size, but also on bubble composition, the problem was subsequently extended to the solution of multi-variate PBM (Buffo et al. 2013). In this work, the conditional quadrature method of moments (CQMOM) is implemented in the open-source code OpenFOAM for describing bubble coalescence, breakage and mass transfer of a realistic partially aerated rectangular bubble column, experimentally investigated by Diaz et al.(2008). Eventually, the obtained results are here compared with the experimental data availabl
CFD Applications in Energy Engineering Research and Simulation: An Introduction to Published Reviews
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) has been firmly established as a fundamental
discipline to advancing research on energy engineering. The major progresses achieved during the
last two decades both on software modelling capabilities and hardware computing power have
resulted in considerable and widespread CFD interest among scientist and engineers. Numerical
modelling and simulation developments are increasingly contributing to the current state of the art in
many energy engineering aspects, such as power generation, combustion, wind energy, concentrated
solar power, hydro power, gas and steam turbines, fuel cells, and many others. This review intends to
provide an overview of the CFD applications in energy and thermal engineering, as a presentation and
background for the Special Issue “CFD Applications in Energy Engineering Research and Simulation”
published by Processes in 2020. A brief introduction to the most significant reviews that have been
published on the particular topics is provided. The objective is to provide an overview of the CFD
applications in energy and thermal engineering, highlighting the review papers published on the
different topics, so that readers can refer to the different review papers for a thorough revision of the
state of the art and contributions into the particular field of interest
Experiments and modelling of a draft tube airlift reactor operated at high gas throughputs
One-dimensional modelling of global hydrodynamics and mass transfer is developed for an annulus sparged draft tube airlift reactor operating at high gas throughputs. In a first part, a specific closure law for the mean slip velocity of bubbles in the riser is proposed according for, in one hand, the collective effects on bubble rise velocity and, in the other hand, the size of the liquid recirculation in the airlift riser. This global hydrodynamics model is found towel explain the global gas volume fraction measurements in the airlift riser for a wide range of superficial gas velocity (0.6 ≤ Jg ≥10 cm sˉ¹). In a second part, mass transfer in the airlift has been studied by using the gassing-out method and a dual-tip optical probe to measure the bubble size distributions. As for bubble columns, in such airlift, the volumetric mass transfer coefficient appears to be quite proportional to the gas superficial velocity. Finally, as in Colombet et al. (2011), mass transfer at the bubble scale seems to be weakly influenced by an increase of gas volume fraction
In situ photogalvanic acceleration of optofluidic kinetics: a new paradigm for advanced photocatalytic technologies
A multiscale-designed optofluidic reactor is demonstrated in this work, featuring an overall reaction rate constant of 1.32 s¯¹ for photocatalytic decolourization of methylene blue, which is an order of magnitude higher as compared to literature records. A novel performance-enhancement mechanism of microscale in situ photogalvanic acceleration was found to be the main reason for the superior optofluidic performance in the photocatalytic degradation of dyes as a model reaction
Polydispersity Effects in the Dynamics and Stability of Bubbling Flows
The occurrence of swarms of small bubbles in a variety of industrial systems
enhances their performance. However, the effects that size polydispersity may
produce on the stability of kinematic waves, the gain factor, mean bubble
velocity, kinematic and dynamic wave velocities is, to our knowledge, not yet
well established. We found that size polydispersity enhances the stability of a
bubble column by a factor of about 23% as a function of frequency and for a
particular type of bubble column. In this way our model predicts effects that
might be verified experimentally but this, however, remain to be assessed. Our
results reinforce the point of view advocated in this work in the sense that a
description of a bubble column based on the concept of randomness of a bubble
cloud and average properties of the fluid motion, may be a useful approach that
has not been exploited in engineering systems.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, presented at the 3rd NEXT-SigmaPhi International
Conference, 13-18 August, 2005, Kolymbari, Cret
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