amockalypsenow
Mechanical
- Sep 14, 2016
- 11
Hi Engineering gurus,
I am tasked with designing a nozzle for a kind of fluidized bed reactor, which will have high temp oil flowing through it and a catalyst of around 1.5mm diameter. The vessel will be a cylinder of 40cm d. x 250cm l.
Problem is, it needs to be back-flushed so must have some kind of mesh or single unit design that inhibits the catalyst from passing through the nozzle.
I'm trying to find out information about how having a mesh in front of this nozzle will modulate the flow of oil into the vessel.
I'm also considering using a laminar flow-esque system of ports ala (Although with a much higher number of ports):
(
What would the practical differences be between a convergent divergent nozzle going through a screen and some sort of laminar flow type nozzle with ports that will inherently restrict the catalyst objects from back flushing?
I really appreciate the help here, this is really outside of my wheelhouse and I don't know where to begin looking into this.
I am tasked with designing a nozzle for a kind of fluidized bed reactor, which will have high temp oil flowing through it and a catalyst of around 1.5mm diameter. The vessel will be a cylinder of 40cm d. x 250cm l.
Problem is, it needs to be back-flushed so must have some kind of mesh or single unit design that inhibits the catalyst from passing through the nozzle.
I'm trying to find out information about how having a mesh in front of this nozzle will modulate the flow of oil into the vessel.
I'm also considering using a laminar flow-esque system of ports ala (Although with a much higher number of ports):
(
What would the practical differences be between a convergent divergent nozzle going through a screen and some sort of laminar flow type nozzle with ports that will inherently restrict the catalyst objects from back flushing?
I really appreciate the help here, this is really outside of my wheelhouse and I don't know where to begin looking into this.