scholarly journals In Situ Bio-Methanation Modelling of a Randomly Packed Gas Stirred Tank Reactor (GSTR)

Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 846
Author(s):  
Leone Mazzeo ◽  
Antonella Signorini ◽  
Giuseppe Lembo ◽  
Irene Bavasso ◽  
Luca Di Palma ◽  
...  

In situ Bio-Methanation (BM) is a recently developed biogas upgrading technique which finds application also in the Power to Gas (P2G) field. In this study a novel configuration of BM digester, the randomly packed Gas Stirred Tank Reactor (GSTR), was modelled. A 49 L reactor, in thermophilic conditions (55 °C) and at atmospheric pressure, was filled up with random packing on which the microbial populations could adhere. The feedstock used was Second Cheese Whey (SCW), liquid waste of cheese factories, rich in lactose (38 g/L), and its flowrate was chosen to obtain a Hydraulic Retention Time (HRT) of 30 days. The process was analyzed for different hydrogen inlet flowrates of 10 mL/min and 50 mL/min. The produced biogas was also recirculated in the reactor in order to transfer, into the liquid phase, as much hydrogen as possible. The model parameters were estimated by means of stationary state information of the reactor working without hydrogen injection, while a dynamical fitting was necessary to evaluate the value of the hydrogen mass transfer coefficient during BM. The model well described the reactor behavior and, by means of a dimensionless analysis in which the numbers of Stanton (St) and β were defined, it was found out that the mass transfer coefficient is the limiting step of the process.

Author(s):  
Lei Wang ◽  
Xiao Xu ◽  
Hualin Wang ◽  
HongLai Liu ◽  
Qiang Yang

A gas-liquid stirred tank reactor (STR) has some problems, such as low mass transfer efficiency, high exhaust gas oxygen concentration, and low product conversion rate, due to limitations of stirring speed and input power. This article proposes a method to enhance the gas-liquid mass transfer in a STR using circulating jet internals. When a circulating jet is added, the average bubble size in the reactor is reduced to 1.26 mm, and the overall gas holdup is increased to 8.23%, which is an increase of 3.62 times of the original STR. The gas-liquid volumetric mass transfer coefficient is increased to 0.05556 s-1, which is 4.84 times of the original STR. The unit volume power is increased by only 1.4 times. These data provide references for the design and scale-up of new jet STRs.


1975 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 132-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.J. Leinonen ◽  
D. Mackay

Abstract Mathematical models are presented which quantify the processes of evaporation and dissolution of components of crude oil in three situations: a spill on water, a spill on ice, and a spill under ice cover in which the oil lies between the water and ice phases. Constant spill area is assumed. The evaporation flux is calculated using a mass transfer coefficient based on windspeed and spill dimensions. The dissolution flux can be calculated from two models, a mass transfer coefficient approach and an eddy diffusivity approach involving the integration of a set of partial differential equations in depth and time. The selection of model parameters is discussed. For the three physical situations, using a synthetic crude oil, results are presented giving the relative rates of evaporation and dissolution and the aqueous phase concentration of selected hydrocarbons. The implications of the results for clean-up technology and aquatic toxicity are discussed, particularly with regard to spills under ice.


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