Abstract

Pneumatic conveying is a widely applied technique for the transportation of powders. Dense phase conveying such as slug flow is the preferable operating condition of such transport systems. Advantages are the reduced energy and conveying gas consumption and reduced material wear. The design and the operation of dense phase conveyors is a challenging task due to complex flow dynamics and the lack of reliable flow meters, which are crucial for process control. In this work the capabilities of electrical capacitance tomography (ECT) for slug flow parameter estimation are analysed. The estimation of flow parameters is addressed and demonstrated by means of laboratory experiments. Amongst other parameters it is shown that mass concentration distributions as well as particle velocity fields can be obtained from tomographic image reconstruction results, which are substantial parameters for potential mass flow metering. Additionally, the proposed estimation techniques are applied to signals provided by an ECT system, which is installed within a large-scale pneumatic conveyor of an industrial process plant. It is observed that also Geldart group A powders with Archimedes numbers in the scale of Ar≈1e0 are conveyable in slug-like structures which can be separated by stationary or non-stationary layers. Furthermore, various slug flow properties of powders with Ar>1e2 reported in literature are confirmed but also deviating properties are observed, leading to novel insights into horizontal dense phase flow processes of powders with Ar≈1e0. The results demonstrated in this work are pointing out the capabilities of ECT for flow analyses, which are enabling further insights into flow mechanisms and future developments of flow meters for dense phase flow processes.

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