Influence of elevated pressure and particle lyophobicity on hydrodynamics and gas–liquid mass transfer in slurry bubble columns |
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Authors: | Vinit P. Chilekar John van der Schaaf Ben F. M. Kuster Johan T. Tinge Jaap C. Schouten |
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Affiliation: | 1. Laboratory of Chemical Reactor Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands;2. Industrial Chemicals Chemistry and Technology, DSM Research, P.O. Box 18, 6160 MD Geleen, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | This article reports on the influence of elevated pressure and catalyst particle lyophobicity at particle concentrations up to 3 vol % on the hydrodynamics and the gas‐to‐liquid mass transfer in a slurry bubble column. The study was done with demineralized water (aqueous phase) and Isopar‐M oil (organic phase) slurries in a 0.15 m internal diameter bubble column operated at pressures ranging from 0.1 to 1.3 MPa. The overall gas hold‐up, the flow regime transition point, the average large bubble diameter, and the centerline liquid velocity were measured along with the gas–liquid mass transfer coefficient. The gas hold‐up and the flow regime transition point are not influenced by the presence of lyophilic particles. Lyophobic particles shift the regime transition to a higher gas velocity and cause foam formation. Increasing operating pressure significantly increases the gas hold‐up and the regime transition velocity, irrespective of the particle lyophobicity. The gas–liquid mass transfer coefficient is proportional to the gas hold‐up for all investigated slurries and is not affected by the particle lyophobicity, the particle concentration, and the operating pressure. A correlation is presented to estimate the gas–liquid mass transfer coefficient as a function of the measured gas hold‐up: $k_{rm l}a_{rm l}/varepsilon_{rm g} = 3.0 sqrt{Du_{rm b}/d_{rm b}^3};{rm s}^{-1}$ . © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 2010 |
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Keywords: | slurry bubble column high pressure gas hold‐up mass transfer hydrodynamics regime transition pressure fluctuations liquid velocity electrolyte lyophobicity |
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