Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch Reactor

Accurate measurement of power numbers on lab scale reactors can provide useful information about the needed energy to reduce mass transfer problems. Next, this knowledge can be used to avoid scale-up problems (Paul et al., 2004). In this study, the accuracy and applicability of four methods to deter...

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Main Authors: Lennart Camps, Luc Moens, Urs Groth, Leen Braeken, Simon Kuhn, Leen Thomassen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2019-05-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9990
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spelling doaj-7485f1fe80714be3a81ea419a7588bbc2021-02-16T21:03:52ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162019-05-017410.3303/CET1974225Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch ReactorLennart CampsLuc MoensUrs GrothLeen BraekenSimon KuhnLeen ThomassenAccurate measurement of power numbers on lab scale reactors can provide useful information about the needed energy to reduce mass transfer problems. Next, this knowledge can be used to avoid scale-up problems (Paul et al., 2004). In this study, the accuracy and applicability of four methods to determine the power number in a 1 L reactor are tested: calorimetry, torque measurement, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and the Furukawa et al. correlation (Furukawa et al., 2012). Experiments with water and 2-octanol are performed with a 4-bladed 45 ° pitched blade turbine (4PBT) and 6-bladed Rushton turbine in baffled and unbaffled conditions. At low rotational speed, experimental techniques record higher power numbers compared to the theoretical techniques. The calorimetric method is only accurate at rotational speeds above 300 RPM due to insufficient heat flow at lower settings. Torque measurement is most accurate at low rotational speed, before the vortex reaches the stirrer and creates cavities that lead to inaccurate results. At rotational speeds higher than 300 RPM, differences between the four techniques are less than 30 %, confirming the accuracy of all methods. Therefore, literature correlations can be used for a quick estimation of the power number in lab scale reactor experiments at high rotational speed. However, experimental techniques are recommended for accurate power number measurements at low rotational speed and for specific reactor set-ups which are not described in literature.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9990
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lennart Camps
Luc Moens
Urs Groth
Leen Braeken
Simon Kuhn
Leen Thomassen
spellingShingle Lennart Camps
Luc Moens
Urs Groth
Leen Braeken
Simon Kuhn
Leen Thomassen
Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch Reactor
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet Lennart Camps
Luc Moens
Urs Groth
Leen Braeken
Simon Kuhn
Leen Thomassen
author_sort Lennart Camps
title Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch Reactor
title_short Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch Reactor
title_full Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch Reactor
title_fullStr Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch Reactor
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Study on Calorimetric Determination of Power Numbers in a Lab Scale Batch Reactor
title_sort comparative study on calorimetric determination of power numbers in a lab scale batch reactor
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Accurate measurement of power numbers on lab scale reactors can provide useful information about the needed energy to reduce mass transfer problems. Next, this knowledge can be used to avoid scale-up problems (Paul et al., 2004). In this study, the accuracy and applicability of four methods to determine the power number in a 1 L reactor are tested: calorimetry, torque measurement, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and the Furukawa et al. correlation (Furukawa et al., 2012). Experiments with water and 2-octanol are performed with a 4-bladed 45 ° pitched blade turbine (4PBT) and 6-bladed Rushton turbine in baffled and unbaffled conditions. At low rotational speed, experimental techniques record higher power numbers compared to the theoretical techniques. The calorimetric method is only accurate at rotational speeds above 300 RPM due to insufficient heat flow at lower settings. Torque measurement is most accurate at low rotational speed, before the vortex reaches the stirrer and creates cavities that lead to inaccurate results. At rotational speeds higher than 300 RPM, differences between the four techniques are less than 30 %, confirming the accuracy of all methods. Therefore, literature correlations can be used for a quick estimation of the power number in lab scale reactor experiments at high rotational speed. However, experimental techniques are recommended for accurate power number measurements at low rotational speed and for specific reactor set-ups which are not described in literature.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9990
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