rolands1
Chemical
- Jul 10, 2007
- 2
Hello,
I am having trouble figuring out what is typically done in my situation (FYI: I am a new graduate in chemical engineering). I have a cylindrical baffled tank (approximately 60" in height, 30" in diameter) with an agitator (2 impellers). I am mixing a slurry which has a strong desire to separate on me. The system is also equipped with a recirculation pump (whose capacity seems to be nowhere near the appropriate capacity).
The tank takes approximately 8 hours to empty. As long as the fluid is in contact with the agitator, the slurry is well mixed and no problems appear. However, the last 10" or so of the tank, the slurry level is below the agitator and the recirculation pump is the only mixing device in effect. Unfortunately, the last 10" takes about 1 hour to drain and due to the poor mixing, the slurry separates on me. I was looking for some solutions from people with mixing experience... here is what I am thinking and I would appreciate any advice...
1. increase the capacity of the recirculation pump, however, the capacity would have to be increased by a very large amount and the space/cost may be an issue
2. add an air sparging system to bubble gas through the bottom of the tank (is this typically done? could it be capable of creating the turbulence required to keep this slurry in tact?)
3. redesign the tank... a coned bottom would reduce the amount of "dead" material to an acceptable level (which would be discarded as waste. however, i fear a new tank would also require a redesigned agitator to ensure appropriate mixing.
Thank you all in advance.
Roland
I am having trouble figuring out what is typically done in my situation (FYI: I am a new graduate in chemical engineering). I have a cylindrical baffled tank (approximately 60" in height, 30" in diameter) with an agitator (2 impellers). I am mixing a slurry which has a strong desire to separate on me. The system is also equipped with a recirculation pump (whose capacity seems to be nowhere near the appropriate capacity).
The tank takes approximately 8 hours to empty. As long as the fluid is in contact with the agitator, the slurry is well mixed and no problems appear. However, the last 10" or so of the tank, the slurry level is below the agitator and the recirculation pump is the only mixing device in effect. Unfortunately, the last 10" takes about 1 hour to drain and due to the poor mixing, the slurry separates on me. I was looking for some solutions from people with mixing experience... here is what I am thinking and I would appreciate any advice...
1. increase the capacity of the recirculation pump, however, the capacity would have to be increased by a very large amount and the space/cost may be an issue
2. add an air sparging system to bubble gas through the bottom of the tank (is this typically done? could it be capable of creating the turbulence required to keep this slurry in tact?)
3. redesign the tank... a coned bottom would reduce the amount of "dead" material to an acceptable level (which would be discarded as waste. however, i fear a new tank would also require a redesigned agitator to ensure appropriate mixing.
Thank you all in advance.
Roland