Abstract

Highlights Knife milled wheat straw-water slurry flow through inclined pipes at various inclinations is experimentally studied. Slurry concentration and pipe inclination affect the onset velocity of drag reduction and the percentage of drag reduction. The critical mass concentration of maximum drag reduction is a vital function of velocity and is independent of the pipe angle. Downhill wheat straw slurry flows exhibit the most significant reduction in drag and the smallest onset velocities. Wheat straw slurry flows moving uphill exhibit nonmonotonic variations in onset velocity and drag reduction. Abstract. Long-distance pipeline hydro-transport of lignocellulosic biomass for industrial-scale biofuel production at levels comparable to conventional oil refineries presents an economically and logistically viable alternative to fossil fuels. There is very limited understanding on the behavior of the transportation of agricultural biomass slurries in an inclined pipeline. This research is focused on a laboratory-scale investigation of 6.4 mm nominal particle length (d50 = 4.85 mm) knife-milled wheat straw-water suspensions' uphill and downhill flows for a range of pipe inclination and saturated mass concentrations. The range of pipe inclination and saturated mass concentration was -7° to +21° and 5%-30%, respectively. The inclined test section was 29 m long with a 50 mm inside diameter of a closed pipeline loop. The accuracy of the measurements was verified by calibrating the inclined pipe section with fine sand (d50 = 0.103 mm)-aqueous slurries and comparing the results with established correlations. Most wheat straw-aqueous suspensions in the inclined flows showed the characteristics of the plug flow and the transition flow regions together for saturated mass concentration, Cm = 5%-30% and the entire flow range (0.5-4.7 m s-1), with a clear dependence of both the onset velocity of drag reduction (vOD) and drag reduction (%DR) on the pipe inclination as well as the slurry concentration and the critical concentration of maximum drag reduction (Cm)cr on a specific range of suspension velocity. Because of the accelerating effect of gravity, downhill slurry flows had the lowest vOD and the highest %DR at every Cm and pipe inclination with a maximum drag reduction of 25.53% at vm = 4.5 m s-1 and Cm = 25%. Uphill flows demonstrated some nonmonotonic changes in vOD and %DR, which need more experimental data for us to reach a firm conclusion. The research outcomes could help design and operate a long-distance integrated pipeline network for biomass transportation to produce biofuels on a large scale. Keywords: Biomass transport, Drag reduction, Flow regions, Frictional pressure drop, Pipe inclination, Wheat straw slurry.

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