lavic2009
Electrical
- Mar 11, 2009
- 5
Hello Everyone,
I am currently working on an US-based waste water related engineering project. This project involves the heating of sludge (6% solids) from about 37-55 degrees Fahrenheit to about 97 degrees Fahrenheit for a 2 phase biological digestive tank system.
In the setup, the sludge is continuously recirculated as new cool sludge is injected into the system. Overflow pipes carry the excess heated sludge of to either high rate digester tanks or egg shaped digesters.
The cool sludge gets pumped via four to six recirculation pumps at a rate of 500-1000 gallons per minute each to a height of 116 feet. At the top, the cool sludge will be mixed with hot steam via three steam injectors. The pressure should be low enough (below 10 Psi) for this to occur. After the incoming sludge has been heated it will enter the acid phase reaction vessel/tank via a pipe that runs almost the entire length of the tank. At the bottom of the tank is an opening where the process starts all over again. (See diagram). As mentioned above the excess heated sludge is carried off via overflow pipes.
Given this setup, I am not totally sure if the heat-injected sludge will have enough pressure to overcome the hydrostatic pressure of the sludge that is already in the tank. Is the setup , given my description and the diagram, viable and theoretically workable or is a redesign necessary?
I would appreciate any feedback on this project. Please let me know If you need additional information, Thanks in advance!
I am currently working on an US-based waste water related engineering project. This project involves the heating of sludge (6% solids) from about 37-55 degrees Fahrenheit to about 97 degrees Fahrenheit for a 2 phase biological digestive tank system.
In the setup, the sludge is continuously recirculated as new cool sludge is injected into the system. Overflow pipes carry the excess heated sludge of to either high rate digester tanks or egg shaped digesters.
The cool sludge gets pumped via four to six recirculation pumps at a rate of 500-1000 gallons per minute each to a height of 116 feet. At the top, the cool sludge will be mixed with hot steam via three steam injectors. The pressure should be low enough (below 10 Psi) for this to occur. After the incoming sludge has been heated it will enter the acid phase reaction vessel/tank via a pipe that runs almost the entire length of the tank. At the bottom of the tank is an opening where the process starts all over again. (See diagram). As mentioned above the excess heated sludge is carried off via overflow pipes.
Given this setup, I am not totally sure if the heat-injected sludge will have enough pressure to overcome the hydrostatic pressure of the sludge that is already in the tank. Is the setup , given my description and the diagram, viable and theoretically workable or is a redesign necessary?
I would appreciate any feedback on this project. Please let me know If you need additional information, Thanks in advance!