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- Fundamentals of Fluidization - II
- (255c) Effects of System Pressure and Imposed Solids Mass Flux On Gas Bypassing in Deep Fluidized Beds of Group A Materials
The gas bypassing phenomenon has been rarely reported in the literature, because laboratory beds are generally not tall enough and commercial units have limited instrumentation. Experimental work at PSRI has found that gas bypassing is due to increased gas compression at the bottom of tall fluidized beds. Reduction in the solids phase permeability at high gas compression ratios results in a biasing of the gas flow - even with proper grid and sparger designs. Previous studies have shown that gas bypassing can be eliminated or significantly reduced by increasing the fines content, increasing the gas velocity, lowering the bed height or installing properly-spaced horizontal baffles in the entire fluid bed.
Commercial fluidized beds often operate with solids flowing through the bed. PSRI has found that imposing a solids flux on the bed can promote gas bypassing. Solids fluxes over the range of 0 to 80 kg/s-m2 were imposed on a 0.9-meter diameter fluidized bed by continuously recycling the solids around the test unit. A Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) analysis of the imposed flux testing using the BarracudaTM CFD code also showed that gas bypassing was more likely to occur at higher solids fluxes.
Increasing system pressure from atmospheric to 280 kPa was also found to lower or eliminate gas bypassing in a 0.6-meter diameter test unit. In both types of tests, gas bypassing was determined using traversing bubble probes and by high-frequency monitoring of the differential pressure fluctuations in the fluidized bed. This paper discusses the effects of pressure and imposed solids flux on gas bypassing in deep fluidized beds of Group A materials.