scholarly journals Analysis of maximum pressure drop for a flat-base spouted fluid bed

2017 ◽  
Vol 122 ◽  
pp. 43-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esmail R. Monazam ◽  
Ronald W. Breault ◽  
Justin Weber
Author(s):  
A. S. M. Yudin ◽  
A. N. Oumer ◽  
N. F. M. Roslan ◽  
M. A. Zulkarnain

Fluidised bed combustion (FBC) has been recognised as a suitable technology for converting a wide variety of fuels into energy. In a fluidised bed, the air is passed through a bed of granular solids resting on a distributor plate. Distributor plate plays an essential role as it determines the gas-solid movement and mixing pattern in a fluidised bed. It is believed that the effect of distributor configurations such as variation of free area ratio and air inclination angle through the distributor will affect the operational pressure drop of the fluidised bed. This paper presents an investigation on pressure drop in fluidised bed without the presence of inert materials using different air distributor designs; conventional perforated plate, multi-nozzles, and two newly proposed slotted distributors (45° and 90° inclined slotted distributors). A 3-dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) model is developed and compared with the experimental results. The flow model is based on the incompressible isothermal RNG k-epsilon turbulent model. In the present study, systematic grid-refinement is conducted to make sure that the simulation results are independent of the computational grid size. The non-dimensional wall distance,  is examined as a key factor to verify the grid independence by comparing results obtained at different grid resolutions. The multi-nozzles distributor yields higher distributor pressure drop with the averaged maximum value of 749 Pa followed by perforated, 45° and 90° inclined distributors where the maximum pressure drop recorded to be about one-fourth of the value of the multi-nozzles pressure drop. The maximum pressure drop was associated with the higher kinetic head of the inlet air due to the restricted and minimum number of distributor openings and low free area ratio. The results suggested that low-pressure drop operation in a fluidised bed can be achieved with the increase of open area ratio of the distributor.


1949 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 39-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. A. Brooks

There have been uncontradicted reports of large altimeter errors in the vicinity of high mountains. A brief survey of pressure distributions over an airfoil with flaps shows a maximum pressure drop below static pressure of twice the velocity head. Applying this ratio to a 14,000-foot mountain in a 100-mph wind a maximum error of 700 feet is indicated. This is important, but not enough to explain the occasional reports of 2 to 3,000-foot errors. Pressure drops of this magnitude exist in tropical cyclones, and even greater depression is known in tornadoes. The pressure drop at the ground surface is seen to have an axial connection with the natural low pressure aloft. The strength of the vortex is shown to depend on the outside tangential input by the wind where the whirl velocity can be very moderate, and the superspeed spin inside a vortex is shown to be dependent on radial inflow of air which is discharged along the vortex axis. Procedures are suggested for locating mountain tornadoes and thorough investigation urged so that the great hazards of mountain vortices in a strong wind will become generally known.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahyar Pourghasemi

In present work, the entropy generation minimization technique (EGM) is applied to study the performance of a microchannel heat sink combined with a new proposed parameter called irreversibility index and energy harvesting concept. Three different cases have been investigated using geometry of a microchanel heat sink selected from experimental work in the literature. The constraints considered in this study, are fixed channel height and maximum pressure drop. It has been observed that with fixed channel height constraint, while the aspect ratio changes from 1 to 10, the optimum operating condition fall in the range of Reynolds number equal to 2000 and aspect ratio of 2.25. Moreover, the extra constrain on maximum pressure drop imposes a limitation on applicable aspect ratio range. The maximum aspect ratio of the channel for stable flow field in this case cannot be higher than 5 imposed by criteria of laminar flow regime. The obtained optimum values are Reynolds number of 1850 and aspect ratio of 2. Using a combined new defined irreversibility index and Energy Harvesting Concept (EHC), it has been shown that the optimum design values for industrial applications are not necessary ones obtained from EGM method and may shift to a new operating point based on the method considered for energy harvesting.


Author(s):  
Abhijit Sinha Roy ◽  
Lloyd H. Back ◽  
Ronald W. Millard ◽  
Saeb Khoury ◽  
Rupak K. Banerjee

Simultaneous measurement of pressure and flow rate has been found to be helpful in evaluating the physiologic significance of obstructive coronary artery disease and in the diagnosis of microvascular disease. This experimental study seeks to find important pressure-flow relationship in an in-vitro model of significant coronary artery stenoses using a non-Newtonian liquid, similar to blood showing a shear thinning behavior, using significant stenotic in-vitro model (minimal area stenosis = 90%). The geometry for the stenotic model is based on data provided in an in vivo study by Wilson et al., (1988). For 90% area stenosis, the maximum recorded pressure drop for steady flow rate of 55, 79 and 89 are 14, ~24 and ~32 mmHg respectively. The maximum pressure drop at flow rate of 115 ml/min (the physiological limit) is 50.3 mmHg respectively. Using a power law curve fit, the maximum pressure drop (in mmHg) related with flow rate (in ml/min) provided a power law index of 1.72. Shorter distal length than required in the in-vitro model did not allow the recording of complete pressure recovery. This preliminary data provides reference values for further experimentation both in vitro with pulsatile flow as in physiological conditions, and in vivo.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 1926-1936 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng-yu Fan ◽  
Jian Zhang ◽  
Xiao-dong Yu

Abstract The water hammer caused by pump failure in a long-distance pressurized pipe system generally poses a severe threat to the safety of the whole system. The maximum pressure drop at the pump end of the discharge line is significant for the safety assessment of the pipelines. In this study, the characteristics of the pump-stopping water hammer and its propagation in the pipelines are analyzed. The formula for predicting the maximum pressure drop is deduced based on the Method of Characteristics and the complete characteristics of the pumps. The application conditions of the formula and the solution procedures are presented as well. In addition, two engineering cases are introduced and the results calculated by the formula are compared with those resulting from the numerical simulation, and the agreement is satisfactory. The formula presented in this study is of simple form, practical and of high precision, and can provide a theoretical basis for the water hammer protection scheme of a long-distance water supply project.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (8) ◽  
pp. 1656-1671 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fan Wu ◽  
Yuanwei Lu ◽  
Mingyuan Wang ◽  
Xingyuan Zhang ◽  
Chunxin Yang

Ozone in aircraft cabin can bring obvious adverse impact on indoor air quality and occupant health. The objective of this study is to experimentally explore the ozone removal performance of flat-type catalyst film by loading nanometer palladium on the activated carbon fibers (Pd/ACFs), and optimize the configuration of ozone converter to make it meet the design requirements. A one-through ozone removal unit with three different Pd/ACFs space was used to test the ozone removal performance and the flow resistance characteristic under various temperature and flow velocity. The results show that the ozone removal rate of the ozone removal unit with the Pd/ACFs space of 1.5 mm can reach 99% and the maximum pressure drop is only 1.9 kPa at the reaction temperature of 200℃. The relationship between pressure drop and flow velocity in the ozone removal unit has a good fit to the Darcy-Forchheimer model. An ozone converter with flat-type reactor was designed and processed based on the one-through ozone removal experiment, its ozone removal rate and maximum pressure drop were 97% and 7.51 kPa, separately, with the condition of 150℃ and 10.63 m/s. It can meet the design requirements of ozone converter for air purification and develop a healthier aircraft cabin environment.


Author(s):  
Mahyar Pourghasemi ◽  
Nima Fathi ◽  
Kevin R. Anderson

Abstract Performance of a micro-scale heat sink with slip boundary condition at walls is evaluated using entropy generation minimization (EGM) approach. Optimum geometrical parameters and working conditions are obtained by applying two different constraints of fixed microchannel height and constant maximum pressure drop. It has been observed that with fixed channel height constraint, the optimum aspect ratio and Reynolds number are 2.5 and 700, respectively. Slip boundary condition has negligible effect on optimum working parameters while it enhances the thermal performance of the heat sink by almost 4% at fixed height constraint. At maximum pressure drop constraint, the optimum working parameters are aspect ratio of 2.25 and Reynolds number of 850. Slip on the microchannel walls reduces pressure drop and enhances the thermal performance of the heat sink by 11%.


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