화학공학소재연구정보센터
Chemical Engineering Science, Vol.62, No.17, 4689-4704, 2007
Experimental and numerical investigation of liquid circulation induced by a bubble plume in a baffled tank
Bubble induced liquid circulation is important in applications such as bubble columns and air-lift reactors. In this work, we describe an experimental and numerical investigation of liquid circulation induced by a bubble plume in a tank partitioned by a baffle. The baffle divides the tank into two compartments. Liquid can flow from one compartment to the other through openings at the top and the bottom of the baffle. Gas (air) was injected in the riser section in the form of bubbles at one corner of the tank. The temporal and spatial variation of velocity field in the liquid as a function of the gas flow rate was measured using particle image velocimetry (PIV). At a constant gas flow rate, the liquid flow field is unsteady due to the interaction with the bubbles. The time scales associated with the velocity-time series and the bubble plume thickness variation were calculated. The time averaged-velocity field was used to quantify the variation of the liquid circulation rate with gas flow rate. The turbulence in the liquid was measured in terms of turbulent intensities. These were calculated from the experimental data and were observed to be less than 3 cm/s. A 2-d Euler-Euler two-fluid model with buoyancy and drag as the interaction terms was used to simulate the flow. The parameters chosen for the simulations were selected from literature. It is shown that inclusion of turbulence model such as k-epsilon is necessary to capture the overall flow behavior. Good agreement was observed between experimentally obtained velocity profiles and the recirculation rates with the simulation results. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.