Abstract

In this paper, mechanical impeller mixing has been analyzed through CFD which has proven to be a useful method for simulating mixing before manufacturing the digester. In this work, simulations were done for five different digester designs for TS level of 12.1%. While the fifth digester was cylindrical, the other four were cubical in design with varying impeller diameters and the number of impellers. The power law model was used to resemble the sewage sludge as a non-Newtonian fluid. The modified versions of dead volume and uniformity index were used along with velocity gradient and mixing energy level to quantify the quality of mixing. An analysis of the temperature distributions during mixing and heating was done using a thermal study. The operating speed of 250 rpm was finalized after testing at continuously increasing speeds from 50 to 600 rpm for a flat blade type impeller. As per the thermal model, a 250-W heater raised the temperature by around 15 °C in just 10 min. It was found that cylindrical vessels worked better than cubical digesters and larger impellers also helped in improving the mixing. The cylindrical digester which achieved about 67% homogeneity at a mixing energy level of around 0.95 W/m3, was the optimum design among the investigated digesters.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call