Die Rendon CK 1998
Die Rendon CK 1998
Die Rendon CK 1998
Va clav Linek
Department of Chemical Engineering, Prague Institute of Chemical Technology, 166 28 Prague 6,
Czech Republic
During the past decennia, the stirred tank reactor, especially for gas-liquid operations, has
received much attention. However, proper design of turbine-stirred gas-liquid reactors on an
industrial scale can still be difficult to make. On the large scale, the removal of heat may become
a limiting factor. Installation of additional cooling coils into the reactor vessel makes the design
problems even more complex. The development of loop Venturi designs offers some new solutions
to the scale-up questions, especially when high pressures are involved. Recent publications on
this type of reactor demonstrate fast mixing (including micromixing), high mass-transfer rate,
and an independently designed heat exchanger in the circulation loop of the reactor. The gas
loop ensuring complete gas mixing represents an additional favorable feature. On the whole,
the loop Venturi reactors can be viewed as an efficient alternative to the stirred tank reactors,
offering easier scale-up. This conclusion is supported by the less dependency of the mass-transfer
rate and mixing on the reactor scale.
Introduction
To design a gas-liquid reactor for commercial processes, the designer requires a lot of information about
the system involved. However, most of the information
can be collected on a small scale (bench or semi-technical
scale). In the selection process of a gas-liquid contactor
type, the stirred tank reactor with a standard turbine
stirrer (Rushton) is the most common choice (Figure 1).
This type of reactor possesses a wide application area
in chemical- and bio-process industry and, accordingly,
has been receiving extensive coverage in the literature,
including most notably classic textbooks by Uhl and
Gray (1966), Nagata (1975), and Oldshue (1983). A
thorough analysis of gas contacting with liquids in
stirred vessels has been presented by Joshi et al. (1982),
Mann (1983), and more recently by Tatterson (1991).
In spite of routine industrial use of stirred tank reactors,
their design and scale-up still pose many questions and
rely to a considerable extent on particular experience
and know-how of designers. In the industrial practice,
the prevailing approach is still scaling-up by empirical
testing with the actual process through a series of scaleup stages. Westerterp and co-workers (1963) performed
in the sixties comprehensive studies both on the physical and chemical behavior of the stirred tank reactors.
Many publications of the group contributed to grant a
citation price and improved understanding of the basic
design. Many investigators came up with their solutions for the scale-up. An astonishing number of papers
in the literature, dealing with the aspects of stirring and
the scale-up, confuses designers. There has been little
agreement about the approach to the scale-up among
(1) Despite many decades of intensive research, scaleup of a stirred gas-liquid reactor still poses considerable
problems.
(2) Conclusion 1 is supported by the many disagreements between researchers investigating stirred gasliquid reactors. The approach to their scale-up is based
on either power input correlations or proceeds via the
more physically justified route by keeping the effective
stirrer speed constant.
(3) The ejector-type loop reactors allow a simpler
scale-up approach and show better mass-transfer performance than the stirred reactors. The system is,
according to the literature, economically attractive at
pressures above 10 bar.
(4) The ejector loop reactors offer flexible design with
many additional favorable features discussed in this
paper.
(5) Upon conclusions 1-4, assessment of the ELR
potential should become a standard part of the process
of reactor selection for reactions in gas-liquid and gasliquid-solid systems.
Acknowledgment
The Czech co-authors (J.Z. and V.L.) gratefully acknowledge support given to the research of ejector loop
reactors by the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic
through Grant No. 104/97/1170.
Nomenclature
D ) impeller diameter, m
d1 ) nozzle diameter, m
d2 ) mixing tube diameter, m
F ) vessel cross section, m2
H ) reactor height, m
kLa ) volumetric liquid-side mass-transfer coefficient, s-1
L1 ) mixing tube length, m
L2 ) diffuser length, m
N ) impeller rotation speed, s-1
N0 ) minimum stirring speed ensuring gas dispersion, s-1
NA ) aeration number, NA ) g/ND3
Np ) power number, Np ) P/FLN3D5
P ) total power input, W
Pg ) shaft power input under gassing conditions, W
P ) ejector pressure drop, Pa
T ) vessel diameter, m
Ug ) superficial gas velocity, m s-1
UL ) characteristic liquid circulation velocity, m s-1
VL ) liquid volume in vessel, m3
Vr ) reactor volume, m3
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