EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE ON GAS-SOLID FLUIDIZATION

Authors
Citation
Jg. Yates, EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE ON GAS-SOLID FLUIDIZATION, Chemical Engineering Science, 51(2), 1996, pp. 167-205
Citations number
168
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Chemical
ISSN journal
00092509
Volume
51
Issue
2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
167 - 205
Database
ISI
SICI code
0009-2509(1996)51:2<167:EOTAPO>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to review experimental and theoretical studies of gas-solid fluidization at elevated temperatures and pressur es. The survey begins with the low velocity end of operations in the r egion between minimum fluidization velocity and minimum bubbling veloc ity and shows how correlations established at ambient temperature and pressure for these two quantities may be used to calculate their value s at super-ambient conditions. The application of purely hydrodynamic fluid-bed stability criteria to account for the transition from the no n-bubbling to the bubbling state is described and compared with the ex pected effect of interparticle forces on this transition. The effects of temperature and pressure on the dynamics of gas bubbles in powders of Groups A, B and D are considered next and areas of uncertainty in c urrent theories of bubble motion are highlighted. Correlations for jet penetration are then discussed and recommendations made as to the mos t reliable of these. Circulating fluidized beds (CFBs) operated at hig h velocity are then considered and it is shown that many of the observ ed effects in these systems at superambient conditions can be accounte d for in terms of changes in the value of the terminal fall velocity, u(t), of the bed particles. The effects of changes in a, on entrainmen t, elutriation and choking are also considered. The effect of increase d pressure in enhancing bed-to-surface heat transfer coefficients in b eds of Group A powders is shown to be due to the suppression of bubbli ng while in beds of Group B materials the enhancement is through an in crease in the gas convective component of the transfer coefficient. Th e small amount of work carried out on heat transfer in CFB combustors is reviewed. Pressure effects on the combustion of char in bubbling be ds are considered in terms of an established two-phase theory model an d it is concluded that the increased rate of solids bum-out at high pr esures is due to an increase in the value of the local Sherwood number thereby increasing the rate of mass transfer of oxygen to the surface of the burning particle. The important question of sintering leading to defluidization at elevated temperatures is then examined and attent ion drawn to the current lack of broadly based mechanistic models to a ccount for and predict the phenomenon. The state of the art in the are a of scaling relationships is reviewed and it is shown that while the scaling laws for bubbling beds are by now reasonably well established the same is not so for CFBs, indicating a major area for further work.