2008 Annual Meeting
(742a) Identifying Emulsion Drop Breakage Mechanisms for Population Balance Equation Models of High Pressure Homogenization
Authors
In this contribution, we demonstrate that drop distribution data from a high-pressure homogenizer can be used to identify relevant drop breakage mechanisms. Two breakage rate functions that depend explicitly on the emulsion properties (disperse phase volume fraction, density, and viscosity, interfacial tension, critical capillary number) and the homogenization pressure were considered. The first function was derived by other researchers under the assumption that drop breakage results from collisions with turbulent eddies, while we derived the second function assuming that breakage is due to turbulent shear. We show that neither breakage rate function nor the combination of the two functions provide satisfactory predictions when binary breakage is assumed and the daughter drop distribution function is a truncated normal distribution. Our experiments reveal that substantial breakage of the pre-emulsion occurs during the first homogenization pass even under zero pressure operation, suggesting a pressure independent breakage mechanism. The use of pressure dependent and pressure independent breakage rate functions along with judicious choice of the other breakage functions are shown to provide superior predictions than can be achieved with a single breakage rate function.