Fluidization XVII
Understanding Particle Flows in Sub-Fluidized Horizontal Stirred Bed Reactors By Radioactive Particle Tracking
Authors
In this research, we developed a lab-scale horizontal stirred bed reactor that enables particle flow studies in non-reactive environments. Since optical techniques are inadequate to study the dense flows, we study the reactor hydrodynamics with X-ray imaging and radioactive particle tracking (RPT). Gas-solid distribution maps acquired with X-ray imaging showed that at higher inlet velocities bed spouting occurs, leading to substantial gas by-pass and poor gas-solid interaction. Now we use RPT to characterize particle trajectories in the reactor. The RPT setup consists of three scintillation detectors that form a field of view around the reactor. Within this field of view the location of the tracer particle is reconstructed with sub-millimetre and sub-second accuracy. We studied the effect of the reactor filling, gas inlet flowrate and agitator rotation speed on the particle cycle time distribution and axial dispersion for industrial-grade polypropylene (Geldart B type). We found that at higher reactor fillings and higher rotation speeds the particle has a shorter cycle time, which would lead to improved heat removal in the process. The results from this study contribute to better understanding of the flow behaviour in horizontal stirred bed reactors.