CFD modeling of nucleation, growth, aggregation, and breakage in continuous precipitation of barium sulfate in a stirred tank / Jingcai Cheng in Industrial & engineering chemistry research, Vol. 48 N° 15 (Août 2009)
CFD modeling of nucleation, growth, aggregation, and breakage in continuous precipitation of barium sulfate in a stirred tank [texte imprimé] / Jingcai Cheng, Auteur ; Chao Yang, Auteur ; Zai-Sha Mao, Auteur . - 2009 . - pp. 6992–7003.
Chemical engineering
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Industrial & engineering chemistry research > Vol. 48 N° 15 (Août 2009) . - pp. 6992–7003
Mots-clés : Barium sulfate (BaSO4) Continuous stirred tank reactor Single-phase Reynolds Navier− Stokes equations Résumé : In this work, the precipitation of barium sulfate (BaSO4) in a continuous stirred tank reactor (CSTR) is modeled. The flow field is obtained through solving the single-phase Reynolds averaged Navier−Stokes equations with a standard single-phase k−ε turbulence model. The population balance equation is solved through the standard method of moments (SMM) and the quadrature method of moments (QMOM) both with and without aggregation and breakage terms. In the cases of precipitation simulation without aggregation and breakage, the results predicted from 2-node QMOM, 3-node QMOM, and SMM are very close. Thus, 2-node QMOM could replace SMM and be well-incorporated into an in-house CFD code to simulate the precipitation in CSTR with acceptable accuracy. The predicted area-averaged crystal size d32 decreases almost linearly with increasing feed concentration, and the deviation from experimental data becomes significant at high feed concentration. Numerical simulation using 2-node QMOM with the Brownian motion and shear-induced aggregation kernels as well as a power-law breakage kernel indicates that the predicted d32 shows good qualitative agreement with experimental results, and the quantitative agreement is achieved when the appropriate breakage rate equation is adopted. En ligne : http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ie9004282