Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
155703 | Chemical Engineering Science | 2012 | 11 Pages |
In this paper, experimental data on the mixing time of the continuous phase and power consumption of gas–liquid–liquid dispersions in a mechanically agitated baffled tank are presented. The electrical conductivity method is taken for the measurement of mixing time and the shaft-torque method for power consumption measurement. Tap water is used as the continuous phase, and kerosene and air as the dispersed ones. The effects of probe/tracer injection position, agitation speed, type of impeller, clearance of impeller off tank bottom, oil volume fraction, gas holdup and physical properties of the dispersed liquids on the macro-mixing of the gas–liquid–liquid system have been investigated. The phenomenon of gas–liquid–liquid macro-mixing in a stirred tank is largely similar to that of liquid–liquid and gas–liquid stirred tanks. Our experiments indicate that the gas–liquid–liquid macro-mixing can be enhanced at higher gas holdups while damped at low gas holdups. Contrary to gas effect, the dispersed oil phase at low holdups increases the macro-mixing intensity but at higher holdups decreases the macro-mixing intensity of the continuous phase. The experimental results show that axial impellers are more energy efficient for gas–liquid–liquid macro-mixing than radial impellers. A simple correlation is developed for predicting the mixing time in gas–liquid–liquid three-phase systems and satisfactory agreement with experimental data is observed.
Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (76 K)Download as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Mixing time in gas–liquid–liquid and liquid–liquid stirred reactors is determined. ► High gas flow rates enhance macro-mixing while low gas flow rates damp it. ► Low oil holdups increase macro-mixing intensity while higher holdups decrease it. ► Axial impeller is more energy efficient than radial impeller. ► A new mixing time correlation for gas–liquid–liquid stirred reactors is proposed.