Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
155240 Chemical Engineering Science 2013 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

The improved mass transfer and reduced macroscopic backmixing of segmented flow regimes in mini and microchannels favour its application in three-phase reaction processes. Therefore, industrial available and standardised catalyst particles or pellets may benefit from these microfluidic phenomena if they are packed into inert minichannels. Such packings form the key components of composite minichannel reactors. In order to evaluate this reactor concept, hydrodynamic phenomena, mass transfer, and pressure drop will be examined for a reactor consisting of a ceramic minichannel packing with a hydraulic diameter of 1.0 mm and dumped spherical catalyst particles of 0.8 mm in diameter. The experimental data, achieved in a setup combining hydrodynamic observation and chemical reaction, were used to derive universal applicable correlations to predict mass transfer coefficients and friction factors from Reynolds, Schmidt, and Sherwood numbers. The work concludes with an extensive comparison of composite minichannel reactors with conventional multiphase reactors and developing packed-bed reactors in terms of mass transfer capability, power consumption, and contacting efficiency.At identical power consumption, the investigated composite minichannel reactor offered a remarkably higher overall mass transfer rate for the gaseous compound than conventional trickle-bed, slurry bubble column, or slurry stirred tank reactors. Similar rates or even higher rates were achieved in miniaturised packed-bed reactors with particles less than 1.0 mm in diameter. Consequently, it is expected that structured and miniaturised packed-bed reactors are a promising concept to intensify multiphase reaction processes, e.g. by switching from batch to continuous processing.

► We examine a reactor consisting of minichannels with dumped catalyst particles. ► We analyse hydrodynamics and mass transfer at a simultaneously occurring reaction. ► We propose correlations to predict hydrodynamic parameters and mass transfer rates. ► The reactor exploits dissipated energy for mass transfer processes superiorly.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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