Abstract

Gas phase velocities is an area in circulating fluidized beds (CFB) that has traditionally received little attention. The dynamics and motion of particles or clusters inside the bed has been the main focus of research. This is because particles dominate the fluid mechanics and heat transfer inside a CFB. However, gas phase motions also effect particle motion. Gas eddies or fluctuations can play an important role in transporting particles to and from the wall. They also help in providing a uniform temperature throughout the bed by promoting mixing. This paper deals with how particles effect the mean and fluctuating gas velocities throughout the cross-section of a riser. Gas velocities were measured inside a cold scale model CFB using a shielded hot wire anemometer. At the centerline, typical mean gas velocities were measured which were approximately twice the superficial gas velocity. These high velocities are likely caused by the negligible net gas upflow in the annulus region. The presence of many dense, downward flowing clusters in the annulus makes this a reasonable assumption. Previous work on gas phase turbulence in two phase flows has typically used either laser measurement techniques in very small diameter risers or in larger risers with very low particle concentration. The general results have shown that smaller particles, on the same order of magnitude as those typically used in CFB and FCC reactors, tend to damp out the gas phase fluctuations. This implies that gas phase motion behaves close to a laminar fashion. This present research measures gas phase fluctuations with typical particle concentrations inside a CFB (∼1–5%). The results indicate that at larger particle concentrations where clusters are formed, the gas phase fluctuations increase dramatically. This suggests that length scales based on cluster size, as opposed to particle size, should be used in estimating the increased levels of gas fluctuations caused by the solid phase. Hence, models which ignore the effect of clusters on the gas or which treat the gas phase as laminar like flow, yield a misleading picture of the flow dynamics inside a CFB riser.

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