METHOD OF ENHANCING HYDRATION OF VISCOSIFIERS USING CONTROLLED MECHANICALLY INDUCED CAVITATION
20220041914 · 2022-02-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01F27/2722
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2208/00575
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J13/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2208/00805
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/008
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J8/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J8/0015
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J8/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01J13/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J8/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J8/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of hydrating a dry powdered viscosifier such as a powdered polymer is disclosed. The method includes mixing the powdered viscosifier with a solvent such as water to form a mixture; moving the mixture through a cavitation zone; inducing energetic shock waves and pressure fluctuations in the mixture by mechanically inducing cavitation events within the mixture, the shock waves and pressure fluctuations untangling, separating, and straightening polymer molecule chains and distributing the chains throughout the mixture, and extracting the resulting hydrated viscosifier from the cavitation zone.
Claims
1. A method of enhancing hydration of a powdered viscosifier comprising the steps of: (a) introducing a viscosifier containing non-hydrated powdered particles into a flow of a solvent or hydrating fluid to produce a mixture; (b) feeding the mixture into a controlled cavitation reactor, wherein the mixture flows from sides of a rotor of the controlled cavitation reactor through a cavitation zone defined between an outer peripheral surface of the rotor and a wall of a housing of the controlled cavitation reactor, and into the rotor through a plurality of bores formed in the rotor (c) as the rotor of the controlled cavitation reactor is rotated, generating cavitation events within the mixture in a low shear environment within the controlled cavitation reactor; (d) controlling a rotor rotation rate as the mixture flows through the cavitation zone to control the cavitation events for generating shock waves that result in cavitation induced pressure variations that propagate through the mixture as the mixture flows through the cavitation zone to substantially separate and disperse the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier within the mixture and increase surface area contact between the solvent or hydrating fluid and the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier; (e) as a result of step (d), forcing solvent molecules into and out of the powder particles to separate, untangle, hydrate, and straighten viscosifier molecule chains contained within the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier to thereby form substantially uniform hydrated viscosifier molecule chains without causing covalent bond breakage or polymer chain scission; (f) distributing the hydrated viscosifier molecule chains substantially homogeneously throughout the mixture; and (g) collecting a resulting mixture.
2. The method of claim 1 where in step (a) the viscosifier comprises a polymer.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein the polymer comprises dehydrated polymer chains.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the solvent or hydrating fluid comprises water.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising controlling one or more of a dwell time within the controlled cavitation reactor, an energy input, a clearance between the rotor and the housing, a temperature of the mixture, a concentration of the mixture, a particulate grind size of the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier, or a combination thereof, in conjunction with controlling the rotor rotation rate as the mixture moves through the cavitation zone to control the cavitation events generated within the mixture.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein generating cavitation events is conducted without heating the mixture or adding a secondary solvent to the mixture.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein generating cavitation events within the mixture comprises forming a low pressure zone within the cavitation zone and forming cavitation bubbles within the bores of the rotor, wherein shock waves and cavitation induced pressure variations that propagate through the mixture are formed upon collapse of the cavitation bubbles.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein step (d) further comprises breaking up lumps of powdered viscosifier powder to minimize fish eyes within the mixture.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein (a) comprises subjecting the collected resulting viscosifier and solvent or hydrating fluid to a batch mixing process.
10. The method of claim 1 further comprising the step of subjecting the collected resulting mixture to a batch mixing process following step (g).
11. A method of hydrating a viscosifier: feeding a flow of a solvent or hydrating fluid through a first port of a controlled cavitation reactor; introducing the viscosifier comprising non-hydrated powdered particles through a second port of the controlled cavitation reactor and into the flow of the solvent or hydrating fluid, wherein the solvent and non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier are mixed, thereby forming a mixture; directing the mixture into a cavitation zone of the controlled cavitation reactor defined between a peripheral surface of a rotor and a side wall of a housing of the controlled cavitation reactor; operating the controlled cavitation reactor including controlling a rotor rotation rate thereof so as to generate, in a low shear environment, cavitation events within the mixture; wherein generating the cavitation events comprises forming cavitation bubbles within the mixture to create shock waves that result in cavitation induced pressure variations that propagate through the mixture upon collapse of the cavitation bubbles; wherein the cavitation events force solvent or hydrating fluid molecules into and out of the powder particles sufficient to thereby separate, untangle, hydrate, and straighten viscosifier molecule chains contained within the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier to form hydrated viscosifier molecule chains without causing covalent bond breakage or polymer chain scission; and collecting a resulting mixture from the controlled cavitation reactor.
12. The method of claim 11 wherein the peripheral surface of the rotor comprises a plurality of radial bores and wherein the cavitation bubbles are generated as the mixture flows through the bores.
13. The method of claim 11 wherein the rotation rate of the rotor is controlled in view of a concentration of the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier within the solvent or hydrating fluid.
14. The method of claim 11 wherein operating the controlled cavitation reactor further comprises controlling one or more of a dwell time of exposure of the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier within the mixture to the shock waves and the cavitation pressure variations, controlling an energy input, a clearance between the peripheral surface of the rotor and the housing defining the cavitation zone, a temperature of the mixture, a concentration of the mixture, a particulate grind size of the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier, or combination thereof.
15. The method of claim 11 wherein operating the controlled cavitation reactor further comprises breaking lumps of the non-hydrated powdered particles of the viscosifier sufficient to minimize fish eyes in the mixture.
16. The method of claim 11 wherein operation of the controlled cavitation reactor to form the resulting mixture is a part of a batch hydration process as a side stream.
17. The method of claim 11 wherein operation of the controlled cavitation reactor increases hydration yield of the resulting mixture by about 20% to about 30%.
18. The method of claim 11 wherein generating the cavitation events is conducted without heating the mixture or adding a secondary solvent or hydrating fluid to the mixture.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013]
[0014] As the rotor spins, highly energetic cavitation events are created in the mixture within the bores of the rotor and are continuously replenished within the bores. In a cavitation event, a low pressure zone forms a cavitation bubble in the mixture within a bore, and the bubble then collapses and releases a highly energetic shockwave. These shock waves propagate from the bores through the mixture as the mixture flows through the cavitation zone of the controlled cavitation reactor. This in turn sets up high energy microscopic and macroscopic pressure fluctuations within the mixture. The shockwaves and pressure fluctuations first separate and disperse individual particles of powder within the mixture allowing solvent (H.sub.2O molecules) to contact the powder particles on all sides. This maximizes the surface area contact between solvent molecules and polymer chains. As the polymer chains in the particles begin to hydrate with solvent, the pressure fluctuations drive the water molecules into and out of the particles. This, in turn, detangles, releases, separates, and straightens the individual polymer molecule chains found in each particle of the powder.
[0015] Cavitation pressure fluctuations are controlled by controlling the rotation rate of the rotor and other variables so that maximum straightening, separation, and untangling of polymer chains occurs without covalent bond breakage and polymer chain cision. Virtually complete separation and straightening of the polymer chains is achieved with minimum damage to the chains, resulting in maximum viscosity development. In addition, the low shear environment within the cavitation zone compared to conventional hydration mixers greatly reduces polymer chain breakage. This results in a maximum number of longer polymer chains within the resulting viscosifier, which in turn improves the viscosity enhancing properties of the viscosifier with a minimum use of powder.
[0016]
[0017] Conventional hydration can also result in inferior product quality with lumps of un-hydrated powder surrounded by hydrated powder referred to as “fish eyes” in the industry. These are detrimental in many ways including waste of polymer powder not contributing to viscosity, cleaning issues, and lack of homogeneity in the final product. With the method of the present invention “fish eyes” are obliterated by the highly energetic shock waves and pressure fluctuations within the cavitation zone, allowing for separation, disbursement, and hydration of the powder and chains within the fish eyes. Thus, lost viscosity due to fish eye formation and the general lack of homogeneity resulting from traditional hydration techniques is eliminated.
[0018]
[0019] In commercial use, the controlled cavitation reactor of this invention can be attached as a side stream of an already existing batch hydration process. Alternatively, it can be part of a continuous hydration process acting upon dry powders mixed with water or another solvent or slurries of polymers and other viscosity inducing agents. One advantage of the present invention is that the requirement of aging after mixing that is an integral part of many traditional hydration techniques is eliminated. With the present invention, the end product emerges directly from the controlled cavitation reactor fully hydrated and ready to use.
[0020] Lab results have shown an increase in hydration yield of 20-30% with the method of the present invention over traditional hydration techniques. Contact time between particles of powder and the energy applied (which is directly proportional to the rotation rate of the rotor) have proven to be critical factors. Fortunately, the cavitation reactor of the present invention can be controlled precisely and easily to establish and maintain virtually any dwell time and energy input for maximizing the hydration process.
[0021] Using the microscopic and macroscopic pressure fluctuations of cavitation according to the method of this invention allows for many benefits in hydration. Some of these benefits include: [0022] Cost reduction and/or increased viscosity due to higher hydration yield [0023] Elimination or reduction of the need for costly secondary solvents [0024] Reduced temperatures required for complete hydration [0025] Less shear damage due to the low shear environment of the cavitation zone [0026] Improved homogeneity and thus quality of the final product
[0027] Many parameters may be varied during the process described above to control the rate of hydration. For example, temperature may be varied as well as rotor speed and concentration of powder within the mixture. It has also been found that gum powder particulate grind size also can be varied and that such variations affect the rate at which viscosifiers are hydrated.
[0028] The invention has been described herein in terms and within the context of preferred embodiments and methodologies considered by the inventor to represent the best modes of carrying out the invention. It will be clear to the skilled artisan, however, that a wide gamut of additions, deletions, and modifications both subtle and gross might be made to the illustrative embodiments presented herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.