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Dominguez et al. Equation for Deposition Velocity Estimation in a Subcritical Flow Regime 2

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Robert_Liang

Mining
Jun 17, 2019
6
p01_rua6vp.jpg


An equation below for deposition velocity estimation is introduced in Slurry Systems Handbook. This equation was published by Dominguez et al (1996).
p02_btkk3v.jpg
(6-52)
where:
g - gravity acceleration
RH - hydraulic radius
ρS - solids density
ρm - slurry density
d85 - solid particle size

The relation of VD and d85 is illustrated below, RH is 0.1 ft.
p03_olac6s.jpg



The relation chart of VD (ft/s) and RH (ft) is illustrated below, d85 is 0.5 mm
p04_nq3mdy.jpg

This chart meets our normal observation: the bigger the pipe/launder, the higher the deposition velocity.

For the slurry carrier’s viscosity different from water, the following equation is derived by Dominguez et al. (1996):
p05_btjvhk.jpg
(6-53)
p06_dalnpd.jpg

p07_an2vnh.jpg

Where:
μm - slurry absolute viscosity
μL - carrier absolute viscosity

The book Slurry Systems Handbook has not mentioned the units of hydraulic radius and absolute viscosity, and the valid range of particle size, solids concentration and carrier viscosity.
Below is a chart of deposition velocity (ft/s) related to hydraulic radius (ft) where the viscosity is considered. d85 is 0.5 mm, μL is 0.00167 Pa•s, CV is 52%
p08_shxa9k.jpg

This chart shows a negative relation of VD and RH: the bigger the pipe/launder, the lower the deposition velocity, which looks ridiculous. So, I doubt the correctness of the equation (6-53) mentioned in Slurry Systems Handbook

I have not access to the original paper of Dominguez et al. (1996). Does anybody have the paper and let me know the correct equation? I have asked the author of Slurry Systems Handbook by email for this question on June 11, 2019 but no reply yet so far.

Thanks a lot,
Robert Liang
 
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Hi Robert,

Please find attached a file with screenshots of the "Deposit velocity of slurry flow in open channels" paper by Dominguez et al from 1996. There is a small mistake in the formula in Slurry Systems Handbook when the slurry viscosity is to be included. The superscript "3" is missing from the last part of the equation.

Kind Regards
 
 https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=b83fedb2-08ad-4fe4-b744-fa1a7b511a9a&file=Dominguez_paper_extracts.pdf
Thanks a lot to IRstuff for the book you recommended. It is a great reference.

Thanks Mech85 for the clarification, I'll verify my calculation with your correction and report the result.

Robert Liang
 
Hi Mech85,

The calculation is done with the corrected equation.
eq01_jgh7dj.jpg
(by Dominguz et al. 1996)
eq02_psnkwy.jpg

eq03_ob1cfj.jpg
(from Slurry System Handbook)

Where:
μm slurry absolute viscosity (Pa•s)
μL carrier absolute viscosity (Pa•s)
ρm slurry density (kg/m3)

Below are charts of deposition velocity VD (m/s) related to hydraulic radius RH (m) or particle size d85 (mm) where the viscosity is considered. d85 is 0.554 mm, μL is 0.00167 Pa•s, CV is 9.64%

The relation between deposition velocity and particle size illustrated below where RH = 0.06536 m and CVf = 4%
chart01_maanmc.jpg


The relation between deposition velocity and hydraulic radius illustrated below where Cvf = 4% and d85 = 0.554 mm
chart02_b5ddz4.jpg


This chart shows the relation of VD and RH: the bigger the pipe/launder, the higher the deposition velocity, which looks regular. So, I think the equation above for deposition velocity of slurry in open channel is rational.
 
The equation for slurry dynamic viscosity calculation is also checked with solid concentration by volume where liquid dynamic viscosity μL = 0.00167 Pa•s
eq03_v61dar.jpg
(from Slurry Systems Handbook)

chart03_xigew7.jpg
 
I have done a study of Darcy friction factor formula to find the relation between open channel slope and channel wall roughness or solids concentration.
eq04_guabqj.jpg
(6-56) in Slurry System Handbook by Green et al. 1978
Where Reynolds number
eq05_q1ajxu.jpg
(page 6.31 of Slurry Systems Handbook)

slurry dynamic viscosity
eq03_dcbpfo.jpg
(from Slurry System Handbook)

slurry density
eq06_uyfpiw.jpg


Slope
eq07_zuakgu.jpg
(6-6) in Slurry System Handbook

The chart below shows the strong relation of slope and roughness where
CV = 52.14%
RH = 0.06536 m
V = 2.32 m/s
chart04_qge8zs.jpg

The slope changes 37.81° from 1.87° to 39.68° while effective linear roughness changes from 1x10-3 mm to 265x10-3 mm.

I found the slope for slurry gravity flow in open channel is only related to the wall roughness, from the calculation of Darcy friction factor vs solid concentration by volume.
Below is the relation between slope and solid concentration by volume CV
where :
• the effective linear roughness kS = 0.013 mm
• hydraulic radius RH = 0.06536 m
• flow velocity V = 2.32 m/s
• solids density ρS = 2095 kg/m3
• liquid density ρL = 1234 kg/m3
chart05_t6db1u.jpg


The slope only changes 0.03815° from 4.284° to 4.332° while CV changes from 0.44% to 52.14% which means the slurry dynamic viscosity changes from 1.7 cP to 34.6 cP. This concludes that the slope has little relation with solid concentration.
 
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