leakyseal
Chemical
- Oct 29, 2007
- 27
Folks,
Seeking solutions for the processing of a 35% solids slurry (metal plating wastes) where it is desired to evaporate the free liquid completely. My thinking had been along the lines of an internally agitated batch mixer/dryer or rotary dryer with internal flights, to allow good surface renewal and hence enhanced MT, and some degree of comminution of the final product to assist with flowablity and packaging.
My client is rejecting these technologies (e.g. Littleford, Ross, AVA etc) due to high cost and perceived complexity and wants to know why he can't just put a bunch of pans in a large oven. The extra labour in handling does not seem to concern him at all. My gut feeling was that this form of evaporation would be hugely inefficient and hence prohibitive from an energy point of view, but some quick and dirty heat balances (given flux values from oven vendors, assuming thin liquid layers (say 1" sheets), tabulated heat-of-vap values and an arbitrary 50% efficiency) seem to indicate that this approach is not as wrongheaded as I first thought.
Anyone have any experience with these kinds of systems and can share their opinions? What else do I need to be thinking about?
Seeking solutions for the processing of a 35% solids slurry (metal plating wastes) where it is desired to evaporate the free liquid completely. My thinking had been along the lines of an internally agitated batch mixer/dryer or rotary dryer with internal flights, to allow good surface renewal and hence enhanced MT, and some degree of comminution of the final product to assist with flowablity and packaging.
My client is rejecting these technologies (e.g. Littleford, Ross, AVA etc) due to high cost and perceived complexity and wants to know why he can't just put a bunch of pans in a large oven. The extra labour in handling does not seem to concern him at all. My gut feeling was that this form of evaporation would be hugely inefficient and hence prohibitive from an energy point of view, but some quick and dirty heat balances (given flux values from oven vendors, assuming thin liquid layers (say 1" sheets), tabulated heat-of-vap values and an arbitrary 50% efficiency) seem to indicate that this approach is not as wrongheaded as I first thought.
Anyone have any experience with these kinds of systems and can share their opinions? What else do I need to be thinking about?