New Engineered Particles from Spray Dryers: Research Needs in Spray Drying |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Sydney, Sydney, N.S.W.,, Australia |
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Abstract: | This article reviews developments in the simulations of spray dryer behavior, including the challenges in modeling the complex flow patterns inside the equipment, which are often highly transient and three-dimensional in nature. There appears to be considerable scope for using CFD simulations for investigating methods to reduce the rates of wall deposition and of thermal degradation for particles by modifying the air flow patterns in the chamber through small changes in the air inlet geometry. Challenges include building particle drying kinetics and reaction processes, as well as agglomeration behavior, into these simulations. The numerical simulations should be valuable supplements to pilot-scale testing, enabling more extensive and accurate optimization to be carried out than hitherto possible. New understanding of reaction processes and materials science, in combination with recent knowledge of the application of CFD to these problems, may enable new engineered powder products to be developed from the one-step spray-drying process. |
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Keywords: | Agglomeration Computational fluid dynamics Product development Reaction engineering Spray dryer Stickiness Wall deposition |
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