PARTICLE PROCESSING
20230372890 · 2023-11-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01J2/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2208/00938
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2208/0084
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01J8/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of operating a gas-solid fluidized bed (130) is provided. The method comprises: flowing a pulsating gas flow upwards through a bed of solid particles from a distributor (104) to cause a dynamically structured bubble flow (130; and processing particles using the fluidized bed.
Claims
1. A method of operating a gas-solid fluidized bed, comprising: flowing a pulsating gas flow upwards through a bed of solid particles from a distributor to cause a dynamically structured bubble flow; processing particles using the fluidized bed.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein processing particles using the fluidized bed comprises setting up a compartmentalised flow regime, in which a plurality of mixing compartments are defined between adjacent bubbles arranged in a triangular tessellation, and particles are mixed by a combination of i) recirculating axial mixing within the compartment with a residence time between 0.1 and 200 s and ii) the controlled advection of particles between compartments at a time averaged rate between 0.01-250 litres.sub.solid particles/m.sup.2 s.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the mixing locally within a compartment comprises mixing with a quasi-static granular flow region in the wake of each bubble defining the mixing compartment.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein processing the particles comprises controlling gas-solid contact time by adjusting the spacing and size of gas bubbles, so that the linear span of the area-based distributions of the bubble size and the horizontal spacing between adjacent bubbles in the fluidized bed may be less than 1.5 and 1.75, respectively.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein a time averaged exchange rate between an emulsion phase of the bed and a bubble phase of the bed is between 0.1 and 500 litres.sub.solid particles/m.sup.2 s.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein processing the particles comprises controlling the stress experienced by each particle by adjusting the spacing between and size of gas bubbles, so that the standard deviation of stress experienced by each particle in the bed is less than 50% of the median stress.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the bed is provided with one or more baffles that divide the bed into a plurality of vertical particle bed portions, wherein each bed portion has a thickness, normal to the baffle and less than twice the horizontal spacing between bubbles.
8. (canceled)
9. The method of claim 7, wherein a lateral extent, normal to the thickness and along the horizontal direction, of the quasi two-dimensional particle bed portion is at least five times the thickness of the bed portion and/or a depth of the quasi two-dimensional particle bed portion is at least five times the thickness of the bed portion.
10. The method of any of claim 7, wherein at least one of: i) the baffles are curved or flat; ii) the baffles extend through only part of the depth of the bed; and iii) the baffles extend downwards from the top surface of the bed.
11. (canceled)
12. (canceled)
13. The method of claim 1, further comprising adding a liquid to the fluidized bed and wherein the particle processing comprises contacting the particles with the liquid, wherein adding a liquid comprises spraying of a liquid onto the fluidized bed.
14. (canceled)
15. The method of claim 13, wherein the liquid comprises a binder or a coating material.
16. The method of claim 1, further comprising introducing solid particles to the bed while the bed is fluidized, and/or recovering processed particles from the bed while the bed is fluidized.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the fluidized bed is rectangular, and solid particles are added in a central region of the fluidized bed, and/or lateral positions following the advection of particles from the centre outwards and/or processed particles are recovered at an edge region of the fluidized bed.
18. The method of claim 1, wherein processing particles comprises adjusting a gas flow to manipulate the flow regime of bubbles in the fluidized bed to vary the conditions of particle processing and wherein processing particles comprises a first phase with a first set of process parameters that cause a first configuration of the fluidized bed, and a subsequent second phase with a second set of process parameters that cause a second configuration of the fluidized bed that is different from the first configuration.
19. (canceled)
20. The method of claim 18, wherein the first and second configuration differ in at least one of: a bubble size, a bubble spacing, a mean frictional stress experienced by the particles; a mixing rate; and a gas flow rate.
21. The method of claim 18, wherein the first and/or second configuration comprise one of: i) a high gas flow without pulsation, sufficient to form an unstructured fluidized bed; ii) a pulsed gas flow sufficient to configure an homogeneous bubble flow within the fluidized bed in which the bubbles are not spatially periodic; and iii) a pulsed gas flow configured to cause a dynamically structured bubble flow within the fluidized bed.
22. The method of claim 1, wherein the gas flow is pulsed at a frequency f between 1.5 and 5 times the natural frequency f.sub.n of the bed, and the pulsed gas flow has a minimum superficial gas velocity that is below the minimum fluidization velocity, and a maximum superficial gas velocity that is above the minimum fluidization velocity.
23. The method of claim 1, wherein processing the particles comprises one or more of: particle coating, particle agglomeration, particle transformation, particle drying and use in catalysis.
24. A particle processing apparatus comprising: a gas flow control valve; and a fluidized bed comprising: a chamber for receiving particles for processing; a plenum below the chamber configured to receive a pulsating gas flow from the gas flow control valve; and a distributor plate separating the chamber from plenum and configured to communicate a flow of gas from the plenum to the chamber; wherein the gas flow control valve is configured to pulse the gas flow to create a dynamically structured bubble flow in a layer of particles within the chamber.
25. The apparatus of claim 24, wherein: the gas flow control valve is configured to flow a pulsating gas flow upwards the fluidized bed of solid particles through the distributor to cause a dynamically structured bubble flow thereby enabling processing of particles using the fluidised bed.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0041] Example embodiments of the invention will be described, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0057] Gas pulsation introduces energy via the fluid-solid interaction force using a pulsed superficial gas velocity, u, which oscillates according to:
u=u.sub.min+/u.sub.a[1+sin(2πft)] (1)
[0058] where f is the frequency of the oscillation applied, u.sub.min is the minimum gas superficial velocity and u.sub.a is the amplitude of the pulse. The resulting time averaged velocity is ū=u.sub.min+u.sub.a. The sin function may be replaced (in both equation (1) and (2), below) with another periodic function with frequency f. For example, a square wave function can be used, in which a valve is switched between an open and closed state at the frequency f.
[0059] Equation (1) can be rewritten in terms of dimensionless velocities, after division by the minimum fluidization velocity u.sub.mf of the powder as û=u/u.sub.mf:
û=û.sub.min+û.sub.a[1+sin(2πft)] (2)
[0060] In a pulsed system, the gas fills interparticle voids and imposes drag directly and simultaneously onto all particles in the volume. Since it entails complex physics, gas-driven pattern formation is not as well understood. It has previously been shown that using an oscillating gas flow through a wide and shallow granular layer, patterns of a very similar nature to those obtained from mechanical vertical vibration are observed. As in mechanically vibrated systems, the wavelength of subharmonic squares and stripes decreases with increasing gas pulsation frequency. In fact, these features also follow behaviour consistent with a Faraday instability, whereby the wavelength of the spatial pattern is inversely proportional to the square of the perturbation frequency (see
[0061] Pattern formation can be attributed to a secondary instability resulting from the propagation of voidage waves induced by the gas pulsation. A dimensionless hydrodynamic number can be used to describe the onset for gas-driven pattern formation in shallow layers of Geldart B particles.
[0062] where u.sub.t is the terminal velocity of particles (used as a proxy for the particle response time), and
[0063] The natural frequency of the system may be estimated from:
[0066] Applying these dimensionless numbers, a universal instability curve can be drawn, describing the onset of pattern formation and separating two regimes, corresponding to stable and unstable patterns as shown in
[0067] The same phenomenon is observed in 2D and 3D domains using different open source codes, such as MFIX and CFDEM.
[0068] Most of the time, the patterns that appear in a pulsed shallow layer collapse in a deeper bed, because the stresses created by the motion of the bubbles dominate the motion of the solids and supersede the surface wave created by the oscillations. However, under suitable conditions, both phenomena interact, and the solid circulation induced by the pulsation contains the primary hydrodynamic instability, preventing chaotic bubble motion. Bubbles are indeed created, but only at specific nodes and at specific times, self-organizing into a macroscopic pattern.
[0069] Within a specific, continuous range of û.sub.min, û.sub.a and f, the bubble nucleation becomes reproducible and the bubbling fluidized bed is said to be “dynamically structured”.
[0070] Gas bubbles are formed at specific nodes, spaced regularly by a characteristic transversal distance or wavelength λ, and a correlation appears between the nucleation sites in consecutive pulses, whereby the nodes in every pulse shift laterally by λ/2. Furthermore, this arrangement can propagate through a deep bed, leading to a fully predictable flow structure, where bubbles do not move laterally, coalesce or break. It is important to note that this phenomenon is not the result of a linear combination and propagation of waves in the domain.
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[0072] Earlier, in Equation (3) and
[0073] In vibrating and pulsed shallow layers, the wavelength λ is inversely proportional to the square of the reciprocal of the frequency, f.sup.−2 (
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[0076] Bubbles naturally grow and accelerate when they move up, so that the polar angle θ of the lattice increases axially (see
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[0078] It is worth emphasizing that the presence of the sidewalls does not support the pattern formation, contrary to linear standing waves, nor is 2D transport of the stress in the solid phase responsible for a pattern to emerge. In shallow beds, the pattern is independent of the container's shape. Square patterns can be produced in a bed with a cylindrical perimeter wall. Regular bubble patterns similar to the ones in
[0079] By fine tuning the pulsation characteristics, it is possible to further extend the height up to which patterns persist in such structured beds. To do so, however, it may be useful to obtain a direct characterization of the solid flow patterns to understand the interaction between different bubble arrays. For practical applications, fully 3D patterns may be realised. Lateral and axial baffles may be used to either stabilize a 3D pattern or otherwise design a collection of (quasi) 2D patterns in a compartmentalized fashion.
[0080] Dynamically structured beds, as described herein, may be considered as having conditions somewhere between those of a fixed bed and a fluidized bed. They offer three main advantages.
[0081] First, dynamically structured beds can mix a powder operating at very low gas flowrate.
[0082] Second, the pattern creates a compartmentalized flow, where the circulation of the solids is completely driven by the motion of adjoining bubble pairs. The compartmentalised flow structure decouples micromixing within each compartment, from long-range circulation or macromixing through the interaction of compartments.
[0083] Finally, in contrast to a typical pulsed bed, a dynamically structured bed is scalable and responsive. The scale of the pattern can be manipulated externally using the pulsation characteristics, and, in this way, define the solid circulation and the gas-contact pattern.
[0084] These three features open the way for alternative designs in a range of processes. Because mixing in dynamically structured beds are typically associated with low slip velocities, heat and mass transport rates are likely to be below those in a traditional, vigorously bubbling (unstructured) fluidized bed. Therefore, dynamically structured units may be less applicable as systems currently operating at very large gas velocities, such as circulating fluidized beds. However, a dynamically structured bed according to an embodiment may drastically reduce attrition, entrainment and the use of gas, while still ensuring local mixing, which can prove valuable in the intensification of processes involving high-value, toxic or dangerous particulate materials.
[0085] In the context of reaction engineering, operation in a fixed particle bed allows for high slip velocities without entrainment of particles in the gas flow, but the lack of particle mixing can lead to heterogeneity. A fluidized bed normally yields homogeneous mixing at the cost of attrition, entrainment and a lower conversion and selectivity. A dynamically structured bed may be particularly applicable for systems with requirements between these extremes, where the use of gas and the loss of material must be minimized, but that still require a certain degree of mixing to ensure a homogeneous temperature and, critically, to reduce external transfer limitations by controlling sintering and agglomeration of the solids.
[0086] In addition, the possibility to control solid mixing at low velocity can improve the energy efficiency of processes operating at low heat and mass transport rates, such as, for example, a solar irradiated fluidized bed collector, or lead to the design of new transport devices. The second feature, of compartmentalised flow, tends to lead to a very precise particle history, as illustrated in
[0087] The ability to establish a narrow particle stress distribution may result in better control over dispersion and drying of binders, and particle breakage and growth processes. Finally, the responsive nature of these beds, illustrated in
[0088] The possibility to control mixing is related to the self-organization of the bubbles and the resulting solid circulation. This phenomenon is in turn a direct consequence of the high solid fractions achieved during the gas pulsation. Sections of the bed in the wake of the bubbles and in between each pair of bubbles transition intermittently to a quasi-static granular flow, becoming jammed in frictional contact. In doing so, they create an obstacle (labelled 1 and 2 in
[0089] The bubbling dynamics described herein is a scale independent phenomenon. It does not rely on the interaction with the side boundaries, but on the collective motion of the bubbles. The bed alternates its behaviour between fluid-like and solid-like. During the valley in each period of the sinusoidal flow of the gas, the bulk of the powder momentarily defluidizes, but the bubbles continue to rise toward the surface, which drives the flow of solids around them. The solids at the top of the bed are pushed towards the sides, colliding vigorously with each other, thus dissipating kinetic energy, and creating a dense area where they encounter the rising solids (central region 21 of low particle velocity in
[0090] In every pulse, a horizontal channel forms near the distributor and splits into bubbles when the gas velocity starts to decrease. The breakage process is then conditioned by the stresses caused by the wakes of the preceding array of bubbles. The pyramid-shaped solid regions in the wake of each bubble shown in
[0091] Provided the bubbles formed are of the same size, the dense areas created in their wakes are equally spaced, which eventually leads to two possible sets of nucleation sites that alternate in every pulse to form the observed pattern. Large bubbles are robust and rise fast, causing a rapid solid circulation in their proximity and large dense regions in their wake. Therefore, they stabilize in a pattern of a large wavelength, whereas small bubbles drive less solid around them and, therefore, become closely spaced, which makes them more sensitive to unbalance.
[0092] Gas pulsation can be effectively used to alter the bubbling dynamics in a fluidized bed and create reproducible, scalable, macroscopic flows. Furthermore, in such dynamically structured fluidized beds, the size and separation of the bubbles can be externally controlled by changing the constant and pulsating components of the inlet gas flow. This provides an unprecedented level of control over the circulation in a gas-solid fluidized bed. Embodiments can bridge the behaviours associated with fixed and fluidized beds, separating micro-from macromixing. An example of dynamic self-organization, which is a universal structuring mechanism in natural systems, dynamically structured fluidized beds take advantage of the structuring induced by fluctuations in energy input and dissipation in a nonlinear system. This is very useful for practical applications, as the desired level of mixing between different species and the gas-solid contact time can be tightly controlled, which is important in coating, drying, granulation or catalytic processes. Beyond the optimization and intensification of current operations, embodiments may open the way to entirely new application areas, benefitting from features of both fixed and fluidized beds.
[0093] An example of a fluidized bed system 100 according to an embodiment, operable to perform the methods described herein, is shown in
[0094] In certain embodiments the distributor 104 may be configured to cause an even pressure drop, such that it, macroscopically, differs less than 10% across 90% of the area of the distributor.
[0095] The system 100 further comprises a gas source 110, main valve 111, filters 112, reservoir 113, solenoid valve 114, needle valve 116, mass flow meters 115 and controller 120. The main valve 111 is configured to isolate the rest of the system from the process gas source 110. The filters 112 are configured to remove potential contaminants from the process gas. The reservoir 113 may act as a buffer between the process gas source and the rest of the system 100. The needle valve 116 is configured to provide the DC component of process gas flow to the plenum 102, and is controlled by the controller 120. The solenoid valve 114 is configured to provide the pulsatile component of the process gas flow to the plenum 102, under the control of the controller 120. In other embodiments, a different arrangement may be used to cause the gas flow pulsatile (e.g. in accordance with equation (2)).
[0096] The controller 120 may be responsive to the mass flows measured by the meters 115 to provide a suitable combined mass flow from the needle valve 116 and solenoid valve 114. Variation of the mixing conditions within such a system can be achieved by varying control signals provided to the valves 114, 116. For example, a high flow, non-pulsatile flow condition can be used to create a typical (unstructured/chaotic) fluidized bed, which may be used to dry a wet product. A pulsatile flow may be used to reduce stresses on the particles, improve homogeneity and limit external heat transfer limitations breading clusters if the powders and binders start to agglomerate. A structured bubble flow may be provided by a pulsatile flow as described herein (e.g. with an appropriate frequency and a flow low enough gas flow that the minimum superficial gas velocity is below the fluidisation velocity).
[0097] In certain embodiments, a larger bed may be formed by stacking adjacent quasi-2D beds, to form a larger bed. Such an approach allows scaling of the advantages of structured bubble flow described herein so that it can be applied to an industrial scale process. Alternatively, a large bed may be subdivided by baffles 131 to form a series of smaller quasi-2D bed portions.
[0098] Such bed comprising a plurality of quasi-2D bed portions has the ability to transition seamlessly between different mixing conditions. It could operate as a normal fluidized bed (with vigorous mixing in a collisional flow regime that maximises heat and mass rates, but also creates large stresses on particles and, as a result, attrition and elutriation), all the way to the opposite extremes in a slow structured frictional flow that mixes the powder slowly, reducing heat and mass transfer but controlling the stress. The transition can be done without internals, in the same vessel, simply actuating the control valves of the gas line to tune the pulsation characteristics. An example would be (i) starting as a typical fluidized bed to dry a wet product (high air flow and no pulse) to (ii) operating under a traditional pulsating flow (reduced velocity and high frequency pulse) to reduce stresses, improve homogeneity and limit external heat transfer limitations breaking clusters if the powders and binders start to agglomerate to (iii) a “structured” regime of controlled particle stresses (reducing gas flow velocity drastically under specific periodic signals) performing a subsequent agglomeration or coating step.
[0099] In certain embodiments, particles/powder may be added to a bed (or each bed portion) in a central region of the bed.
[0100] In certain embodiments a liquid may be introduced, for example by top down spraying using a nozzle in a similar position to the powder feed 140 in
[0101] In certain embodiments, different powders or liquids may be added at different positions in the bed, dependent on their required mixing time. Powders or liquids that require long mixing times may be added nearer to the centre of the bed, and powders or liquids that require shorter mixing times may be added nearer to the edge of the bed. More than one addition point may be provided, so that more than one powder or liquid is introduced at different positions.
[0102] Although specific examples have been described, the skilled person will appreciate that variations are possible, within the scope of the appended claims. The scope of the invention should be determined with reference to the appended claims, and any variations included within their scope.