화학공학소재연구정보센터
Chemical Engineering Science, Vol.62, No.13, 3397-3409, 2007
Computation of gas and solid dispersion coefficients in turbulent risers and bubbling beds
A literature review shows that dispersion coefficients in fluidized beds differ by more than five orders of magnitude. To understand the phenomena, two types of hydrodynamics models that compute turbulent and bubbling behavior were used to estimate radial and axial gas and solid dispersion coefficients. The autocorrelation technique was used to compute the dispersion coefficients from the respective computed turbulent gas and particle velocities. The computations show that the gas and the solid dispersion coefficients are close to each other in agreement with measurements. The simulations show that the radial dispersion coefficients in the riser are two to three orders of magnitude lower than the axial dispersion coefficients, but less than an order of magnitude lower for the bubbling bed at atmospheric pressure. The dispersion coefficients for the bubbling bed at 25 atm are much higher than at atmospheric pressure due to the high bed expansion with smaller bubbles. The computed dispersion coefficients are in reasonable agreement with the experimental measurements reported over the last half century. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.