Научная статья на тему 'Gas cleaning of electrochemical exhaust as applied to Ecology'

Gas cleaning of electrochemical exhaust as applied to Ecology Текст научной статьи по специальности «Физика»

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Fundamentals of Low Speed Scrubbing Technology (LSST) are reported. LSST belongs to neither coflow nor counter flow conventional production strategy. It uses low gas speed ~ (10-20) m/s and spontaneous sequential modification of counter flow into co-flow. These features provide intensive mass exchange resulting in high scrubbing efficiency (coefficient of the gas mass exchange measures up Вv,g ~ (20-30) m3/m3s). This allows for suitable solution of some technological and environmental problems, including industrial exhaust cleaning. LSST embodies scrubbers of special design known as Low Speed Absorbers (LSA). It consists of contacting chamber in series with separation chamber, the former being intended for mixing and interaction of gas and liquid, while the latter provides phase separation. LSA is free of any mechanical or pressure loads, has low hydraulic resistance, has no unreliable structural units and needs no auxiliary facilities. It is a foolproof and serviceable construction.

Текст научной работы на тему «Gas cleaning of electrochemical exhaust as applied to Ecology»

ЭЛЕКТРИЧЕСКИЕ ПРОЦЕССЫ В ТЕХНИКЕ И ХИМИИ

V.I. Dimitrov

GAS CLEANING OF ELECTROCHEMICAL EXHAUST AS APPLIED TO ECOLOGY*

Faculty of Natural Sciences, Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences,

Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv, Israel

Introduction

Non - catalytic sorption/chemisorption as a whole, including gas-liquid interaction in particular, is conceptually a phenomenon of a physico-chemical nature. It consists of the physical process of gas dilution in the liquid phase followed by a chemical interaction. These processes are well understood1"5. Theory and design principles permit rate (efficiency) and limits of the sorption depending on both physico-chemical parameters of the process and engineering design to be quickly and reliably estimated. In engineering, these processes are usually done in units known as wet-scrubbers (or absorbers), the scrubbing process (i.e., gas -liquid interaction) proceeding as either a counter-flow or co-flow regime.

In addition to the conventional co/counter-flow technologies, Low Speed Scrubbing Technology (LSST) is intended for the purification of industrial exhausts from both gaseous and solid (dust) pollutants6,7. It does not belong to either a counter-flow or co-flow system, but is based on the idea of regime change8"12. For practical embodiment, a scrubber of special design known as Low Speed Absorber (LSA) is required. To gain an insight into both the theoretical basis and to design features of this technology, it is useful to follow a process in the simplest one-stage LSA.

General

One-stage LSA conceptually consists of the contacting chamber, separation chamber, fixed (immovable) centrifugal separator, and various hydraulic units (Fig. 1) and functions as follows.

The initial contaminated gas enters the contacting chamber from the bottom upward and starts to ascend. At this stage it meets a liquid jet descending via back-pipes from the separation chamber joined from above. Initially, the discharge liquid jet is compact. Then it simultaneously starts to fall under gravity and break down into smaller fragments (regular and irregular drops) on exposure to the ascending gas. As this takes place, the small drops (i.e., with weights smaller than the dynamic pressure of the ascending gas) are instantly picked up by the ascending gas and start to ascend jointly with the gas. The heavier drops continue to descent and split concurrently, thus re-generating both small and large drops. Eventually, spontaneous self-fragmentation terminates. Aerosols result from this process and continue to fall until retarding forces become initially equal to gravity and then more than gravity for any liquid fragment. From this point on, the dispersed liquid phase starts to ascend.

This aerosol leaves the contacting chamber and enters the fixed centrifugal separator of the separation chamber located above. Welded curvilinear blades of the fixed centrifugal separator direct haze onto the wall of the separation chamber. Here actual phase separation occurs: the gas exits into the atmosphere as the cleaned exhaust, while the liquid flows down the wall and accumulates at the bottom of the separation chamber. Then the densest portion (i.e., lower layers of the liquid) is drained via a drainage outlet, while the most aerated portion (i.e., upper layers) is partially recycled under gravity via back-pipes to the contacting chamber.

* Доклад на заседании Международной школы - семинара по прикладной электрохимии и электрическим методам обработки материалов "Петровские чтения", 11 октября 2002 г - (секция "Электрохимия и экология" 2-й Международной конференции по экологической химии, Кишинев, 11 - 12 октября 2002 г.)

© Dimitrov V.I., Электронная обработка материалов, 2003, № 2, С. 42-52.

In this way, there is an inner automatic recycling of the liquid phase between the contacting and separation chambers. Its special feature lies in the fact that the times of phase contact relative to gas and liquid are dependent on different factors and hence can be controlled independently. Contact time on the gas side is completely predetermined by the gas speed, while contact time on the liquid side depends on the gas speed and the regime of liquid phase renewal (i.e. ratio of the feed and drained liquid fluxes). The latter, in turn, is a function of the current physico-chemical properties of the liquid and dispatch state. Contact time on the liquid side is evidently unlimited and should be set accordingly to the efficiency of mass exchange by means of the variation of liquid phase renewal. Hence, control valves of feed liquid and drainage can vary the contact time from the liquid side independently and simply. By and large, this provides high flexibility of the practical control of LSA operation.

A point of any scrubbing technology is to mix the gas and liquid phases as well as possible. Diverse conventional devices (e.g., packing, mechanical agitators, or mixers, as well as injectors, nozzles, etc.) are designed for suitable solution of the mixing problem. LSST has no need for any man-made mixing device because it is the counteraction between inertia forces of the ascending gas and the gravity forces of the descending liquid that triggers self-fragmentation and acts as a natural stirrer. This "stirrer" is uniformly distributed over the whole volume; it affects all spatial points of the contacting chamber. Therefore, the back-pipes connecting the separation and contacting chambers are standard tubes rather than some specific injectors. The mode of operation (continuous, periodical, etc.) of drainage and supply of feed liquid, as well as the amount of the recycling liquid, are dictated by both sorption features and liquid properties. It facilitates easy remote control through the control valves. In this way, the low speed scrubbing process begins as a counter-flow while it terminates as a co-flow.

Essentials

The most general equation of unsteady heat/mass exchange between the gas and dispersed liquid phase is of the form 1

dc 1 d 2c 1 d(c,a)

— =---7 + . (1)

dz Ped %2 ^ aG, n)

Here %, r, a> are dimensionless co-ordinates, gS = { g^, gnn, gao} is the metric tensor. Leaving aside

any details of formal transformation, Eq. (1) can be eventually reduced1,13,14 to the well-known equation of unsteady diffusion as follows:

- = Af d . (2)

dz dx y dx J

The solution of Eq. (2) depends on the nature of transfer processes, reciprocity of transfer phenomena and chemical processes, as well as initial and boundary conditions. In the approximation of the diffusion boundary layer, these items are usually considered with the help of similarity criteria in the following way:

Nud = F (Re, Ped, Sc, Fr), (3)

p Lu Lu v u2

Re = r- , Ped =~r, Prd(Sc) = T , Fr = ^".

n d d gL

Physically, these determining criteria consider the nature of gas flow (Reynolds number Re), the interdependence of convection and diffusion transfer (Peclet number Ped), the similarity of the speed and concentration fields (either Schmidt number Sc or Prandtl number for diffusion Prd), and scale factor (Froude number Fr). The most comprehensive theoretical analysis of various specific cases (e.g., Stokes regime/potential flow, laminar/turbulent motion, small/large Pe-criteria, surface/volume chemical reaction) can be found in Gupalo et al 6. Practical use of similarity theory requires knowledge of both hydro/gas-dynamics essentials and numerical values of parameters as initial and boundary conditions (i.e., design features). The former can be revealed by pure analysis, while the latter are only experimentally determined.

Hydro/Gas-dynamics

As can be seen from above, LSST possesses specific hydro/gas-dynamics. Compared to conventional co/counter-flow systems, the essentials of LSST hydro/gas-dynamics can be explained as follows. To provide a stable LSST regime, the counteraction between inertial forces of the ascending gas and gravity forces Fn of the descending liquid takes place under prevalence of the former relative to the drop of any R- size. The fall rate of the very large drops R oc > R > Rsf (compact liquid jet Ro and the boundary of

self-fragmentation Rsf are the limits) is independent of the drop weight and size while solely is dependent on gravity

Fn ~ (mg)l ~ (4/3)%pgR3. (4)

At the same time, the fall rate of the smaller drops R < Rsf is essentially dependent on their size. Any R-drop maintains its integrity until consolidating forces (surface tension Fs)

Fs ~ a R , (5)

exceed breaking forces of resistance to the motion, the latter being a function of the motion regime and size of drop

„ p uL | < Re cr - laminar flow

Re = -— = <---. (6)

n [ > Recr - turbulent flow

For the turbulent flow around a small sphere R ~ 10-6 m, local Recr ~ 10, while resistance forces Ft are proportional to the drag force of the gas and the drop size

Ft ~ (pu2)gas R2. (7)

The comparison of Fs and Ft (Eq. 5, 7) shows that the upper limit of fragmentation is non-existent, i.e., the breaking forces prevail over the consolidating ones under all conditions, including the limit Rx of compact liquid jet. Physically, this means that any free-falling compact liquid jet disintegrates inevitably sooner or later. Spontaneous self-fragmentation terminates at the point when the velocity head of the ascending gas becomes equal to the forces that determine both the scale and integrity of the drop (i.e., surface tension). Thus, the lower limit of self-fragmentation is dictated by their equality Fs ~ Ft

Rf - -U-. (8)

p u

3

Hence, Rsf is dependent on the gas speed. It is easy to see that for pure water (p - 1000 kg/m a75 - 65 kg/s2, ^75 - 3,810-4 kg/ms) and typical LSST regimes u ~ (10 - 20) m/s, the average size distribution lies mainly within the range Rsf ~ (100 - 500) 10-6 m. Redistribution of size grading in the domain located below the level of the back-pipes is governed by the scrubbing speed and properties of the liquid phase. Specifically, the surviving drops Rsf > R > R1 maintain their integrity and continue to fall in the turbulent regime as long as the condition Re > Recr of Eq. (6) remains valid. Finer drops Ri > R > R2 fit the condition Re < Recr of Eq. (6) and fall in the laminar regime. They are exposed to the breaking forces of the conventional gas-dynamic (Stokes) nature

Fst = 6nRun - 6nRun. (9)

st (1 + X / R)

As follows from Eq. (4, 9), limiting Revalues fall in the range Ri ~ (50 - 100)-10-6 m for typical LSST gas speeds u ~ (10 - 20) m/s. Finally, the finest drops R < R2 maintain their integrity while never falling. Once generated, they are immediately carried by the ascending gas into the separation chamber. The main feature of their motion lies in the fact that their absolute velocity is equal to the velocity of the gas carrier. In other words, the relative velocity of their motion equals zero. Thus, collisions rarely occur and this finest fraction survives up to the final exhaust (unless special measures are implemented).

The upper limit R2 is dependent on scale height of the medium H = kT/mg and for the limiting case of free fall, it can be estimated as

R2

/ ,\1 /7

{ kTn2 ^

10-6 m.

3 2

VP3g J

Thus, the hydro/gas-dynamic pattern of disintegration can be generalised as follows: Rx > R > Rsf - free (Newton) fall, progressive self-fragmentation, settling rate is independent of drop size, Rsf> R > R1 - turbulent motion, partial fragmentation of the coarsest portion of aerosols is admissible, settling rate depends on drop size as u ~ R1/2, R1 > R > R2 - laminar (Stokes) motion, no fragmentation, settling rate depends on drop size as u ~ R2, R2 > R - forced ascent (no fall), neither fragmentation nor drop growth occurs.

The zone of self-fragmentation (domain between the level of the back-pipes and lower spatial boundary of aerosol) contains a very wide spectrum of drops R2 < R < Ro. At the same time, the domain located above the level of the back-pipes contains finer aerosol R2 < R < Rf (thin haze), i.e., this zone is far more uniform in the sense of size distribution.

So far only destruction has been considered. Various transfer effects (e.g., gravity, diffusion, convection) lead to collisions followed by coagulation of drops resulting in their growth 15. Physically, the upper limit of this growth is evident, since any newly formed drop Rnew to be smaller than the limiting values Rf, R1, R2 along the whole associated range of physical conditions. Otherwise, if such drop Rnew > Rf, R1, R2 is generated, then it will be destroyed again.

The growth of any drop R(x) along the fall distance dZ = udx depends on both number of collisions and liquid-water content Gl kg/m3. For free fall, the relation between current mass dm of some R- drop and motion parameters

2 2 2 ^ 2n gp lR4

dm ~ (4/3)%pimR2dR ~ Gi%R2dZ ~ Gi%R2udr ~ Gl-—— dx (10)

9n

allows for simple estimation of both dynamics of drop growth (terms 2 and 3)

( 11 )

dR Gt

dZ 4pl

and fall time considers this growth (terms 2 and 5 of Eq. (10))

18n

Xf ~-.

gGlRini

( 12 )

Eq. (11) shows that the drop growth is independent of the motion regime, while Eq. (12) demonstrates that the fall time is independent of the final drop size (since the latter does not appear in Eq. (12)), being dependent only on the initial size Rini. Eventually, the gravity force acting on any drop becomes less than the force of tractive resistance resulting in the termination of the fall. From this point on, the ascending gas selects and includes all liquid drops. The bottom spatial boundary of the fall distance represents the separation line between the domain of the incoming gas and the self-fragmentation zone, while the top boundary (i.e., back-pipes level) is the separation line between the self-fragmentation zone and the fine aerosols. Above the level of the back-pipes, any small object R2 <R <Rf (no matter whether liquid or solid) acquires the velocity of the gas carrier.

Thus, the consideration of coagulation has a marginal effect on the general pattern. At the same time, it is relevant in relation to the current value of the interfacial area and intensity of heat/mass exchange between the gas carrier and the dispersed liquid phase. The collision of drops results in size redistribution during counter-way traffic of large (falling) drops and small (ascending) droplets, i.e., along the entire length of fall distance Z. Interaction of the ascending and descending dispersed objects is extremely favourable. In gas dynamics terms15, it increases residence time xlife. But more significantly, it enforces the sorption because of the continuous renewal of the interfacial area.

Both of these factors considerably improve the mass exchange coefficient p, the latter being the most important generalized index1,3,4,13,16 of the sorption efficiency.

As is evident, self-fragmentation time, fall time, residence time and fall distance lie in averaged ranges Xf [(2/104)PlRmiRf)]l/2 ~ (0,05 - 0,20) s, Xf ~ (0,3 - 1,0) s, Xf ~ (1,0 - 2,5) s and Z ~ (0,5 - 1,2) m, respectively. The specific interfacial surface S is the interfacial area per unit volume [m2/m3]. It is one of the most important indices among others. With the assumptions of normal (Gauss) size distribution and spherical shape of the drops, it can be approximated as S ~ 3-103/R ~ (400 - 800) m2/m3 depending on gas speed u ~ (10 - 20) m/s and volumetric flux of water 5 ~ (0,02 - 0,10) m3/m2s. These estimates are in good agreement with the direct experimental data 17 (fig. 2).

To generalise, it should be stated that in deciding on scrubbing speed, the dominance of gas momentum over liquid momentum

(pu)g > (pu)l (13)

is the single crucial constraint of LSST applicability.

Experiment

To suit the similarity theory, the experimental apparatus for LSST investigation was designed as a transparent 1:10 reduced scale model of a typical cylinder-shape full-scale scrubber of 50000 nm3/h gas load (fig. 1). Values of the main criteria Remodel = Renature, Ped, model = Ped, nature, Scmodel = Scnature were satisfied. Other criteria, including Fr and thermal, were held constant whenever possible. Measurements of the contacting and separation chambers were equal to D = 0,4 m, L = 1,1 m and D = 1,0 m, L = 0,7 m, respectively. Total gas load, gas spead and volumetric flux of water varied within the limits Vg ~ (1,0 - 3,0) m3/s, u ~ (8 - 25) m/s, and 5 ~ (0,02 - 0,10) m3/m2s, respectively. Polluted primary gas contains various admixtures (e.g., phenol, ammonia, hydrochloric acid)that are typical for some electrochemistry exhaust. Below are given data regarding primary gas polluted with the mixture {(2-8)% SO2 + (1-4)% SO3}.

Fig. 1. Schematic diagram of one-stage Low Speed Absorber (LSA)

With the control system, high-speed (up to 5000 shots/s) photography and on-line measurement of the main process characteristics were possible. Other details can be found elsewhere 10,17, 18.

The prime object lies in the direct experimental determination of the main technological (residence time, fall time and distance, interfacial area, size distribution and zoning of the dispersed phase) and sorption indices (heat/mass-exchange coefficients P), which are dependent on LSST operating parameters (gas load,

scrubbing rate and volumetric flux of water) and LSA design features (geometric and aspect ratios, positional relationship of various units and hydraulic resistance). Experimental data combined with the essentials of dimensional analysis provide adequate LSST description to yield simple analytical quantities for practical LSA design. Relevant data17'18 are shown in figures 2-4 and table 1 and can be briefly summarized.

Fig. 2. Specific interfacial surface S versus volumetric flux ofwater 5, 1-u = 10 m/s, 2-u = 15 m/s,

3-u = 20 m/s

Specific interfacial surface S was determined experimentally by a known chemical method19. S is almost independent of the gas speed, while it is strongly dependent on volumetric flux of water (fig. 2). This dependence can be approximated with an accuracy of 12% in the form

S = 1775 • u 0'2S0'63. (14)

Fig. 2 and Eq. (14) conceptually confirm the validity of the above presented theoretical approximation. At the same time, the weakened S-u correlation seems to be the result of some liquid loss from the contacting chamber as the gas speed increases.

Both mass holdup of liquid gl

gt = Gt / V = 0,209 • u-0'795°'92 (15)

and its residence time rlife in the contacting chamber

Tlife = ¿cont / 5 (16)

are strongly dependent on volumetric flux of water 5. The volumetric holdup of gas in the contacting chamber vg is defined as the difference between the volume of contacting chamber V and volumetric holdup of liquid vi = gi /pi

vg = V - vi.. (17)

Usually, volumetric fraction of gas = vg/vl falls in the range (0,90 - 0,98).

The main interest was focused on the direct experimental determination of mass exchange efficiency and search for opportunity of its intensification in the context of the unsteady phase interaction. Some of the generalised results are briefly as follows.

Mass-exchange efficiency of LSST was estimated with the help of the following transfer coefficients. The coefficient of the liquid mass exchange pv>l represents volumetric gas flux from the gas phase to the liquid phase with respect to the whole gas-liquid volume. It was determined experimentally by the ex-

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ample of carbon dioxide CO2 desorption from its aqueous solution. pv>l - values are dependent on the gas speed and volumetric flux of water (fig. 3); the semi-empirical average approximation is in the form

Pvl = 0,457 • u 0,25S0,i

with an accuracy of 10%.

w M

A

u M

Qj

M M

rt w

s ^

is

I

a

Qj

rg

fj

a

Qj

■ pH

U

s

Qj O

U

0,12

S £

0,08-

0,04-

0,02 0,06 0,1 Volumetric flux of water 5 m^/ m*- s

(18)

Fig. 3. Coefficient of the liquid mass exchange pv?i versus volumetric flux of water 5, 1- u = 10 m/s,

2 - u= 20 m/s.

A comparison of Eq. (14) and (18) shows that the gas speed affects both pv>l and S equally. As a result, the coefficient of the surface mass exchange pv,S , i.e., volumetric gas flux from the gas phase to the liquid phase with reference to the specific interfacial surface S, seems to be practically independent of the gas speed. Both the direct experimental plot of P,S against u (fig. 3) and semi-empirical analytic approximation

pv,S = pvj / S = 0,0003 • u°,°5S°,23 (19)

prove this feature of mass exchange in LSA.

The coefficient of the gas mass exchange pvg, i.e., volumetric gas flux from the gas phase to the liquid phase with reference to the gas volume, was determined experimentally through the rate of adiabatic evaporation of water. The weaker the solution, the more valid is the method 20. Therefore its use is justified considering that the solution strength does not exceed ~ 20%. The correlation of pvg with the length of the conacting chamber for a different gas speed u and volumetric flux of water 5is displayed in fig. 4. The coefficient of the gas mass exchange pvg represents (by definition) the average product of some local index (Pv,g)loc and local interfacial surface Sloc. Therefore, its decrease along the contacting chamber length is attributed to the decrease of either (pv,g)loc or Sloc. The former could occur if the diffusion on the gas side through the boundary layer quickly decays for any reason (e.g., fast equalisation of phase potentials). Otherwise, the governing factor is the duration of boundary layer formation. As to the possible decrease of Sloc, it may occur due to either coagulation (see above) or the effect of initial and boundary conditions. Any other admissible reason for pvg variation is dismissed because of the high values of Re and Pe-criteria (Re ~ 105, i.e., it is turbulent regime, while Pe ~ 103 , i.e., convection is the dominant process). The elbow (saturation) of the curve in fig. 4 marks the termination of the transitional unsteady period of two-phase flow formation and transition to the steady flow regime.

A specific feature of the transfer coefficient p lies in the fact that it is the most generalised index of scrubbing efficiency and hence it is a function of both the operating conditions p = p (P, T, u, 5) and design features p =p (L, D, x, S). However, the former is more or less restricted and can not be widely varied, while the latter is completely dependent on hydro/gas-dynamics. This means that the mass exchange can be restrictively varied only by optimisation of the LSA design. Thus, from the specific point of view of the LSA designer, data in fig. 4 should be read as a practical recommendation for initial approximation of the

contacting chamber dimensions. Depending on the given flow sheet and customer demands, this quantity will be specified later in the project development.

The achieved values of index p can be found in figures 3 and 4 and table 1.

Table 1. The main LSST and LSA scrubbing variables

Indices Wet-bed Venturi tube One-stage LSA

1 Gas load (max), Vg nm3/h ~ 180 000 < 100 000 300 000

2 Number of stages in one set 1 - 2 1 Any

3 Operational regime Co/counter Only co-flow Compound

4 Interfacial area, S m2/m3 max 250 max 400 400 - 800

5 Gas speed, u m/s 20 - 40 50 - 120 10 - 20

6 Contact time, x s 0,05 - 0,30 0,02 - 0,10 0,20 - 2,50

7 Volumetric flux of water S m3/m2s 0,04 - 0,10 0,40 - 1,10 0,02 - 0,10

8 Hydraulic resistance H, Pa 2000 - 2500 3000 - 8000 < 1400

9 Coefficient of the gas mass exchange pvg m3/m3s 5 - 8 7 - 12 20 - 30 (see text)

10 Cleaning efftciency*(dust)% < 85 < 95 > 98

11 Cleaning efficiency (oxides) ~ (50 -90)% ~ (60- 95)% ~ (70- 99)%

12 Dimensions (averaged), m ~ 5,0 / 100 ~ 3,0 / 6,0 ~ 3,5/10,0

13 Dry mass (averaged), kg ~10000 ~ 6000 ~ 9000

Note : * Strongly depends on size distribution R = R(u).

The simplified entry of the overall purification efficiency can be presented in the form5 :

AG ~ px 5 S (20)

Here AG is total amount of captured and fixed impurity (whether it be gas, liquid or solid), 5 is volumetric flux of liquid, x is residence time, S is specific interfacial surface, while p represents mass exchange coefficient.

The average values of these quantities for LSST typical regimes fall within the following ranges.

Volumetric flux of water is predetermined by gas momentum (pu)g and lies in the range

5 ~ (0,02 - 0,10) m3/m2s. The residence time is the sum of the fall time and one of the ascending co-flow

along the contacting chamber x1 =L/u, being equal to xlife = x/+ x¡ ~ (0,2 - 2,5) s. It should be stressed that

increase of the gas speed from u1 to u2 = nu1, n > 1 implies not only the growth of the interfacial area, but

2 2 2 2 2 also quadratic increase in the hydraulic resistance AH = H2/H1 ~ p(u2) /p(u1) ~ p(nu1) /p(u1) = n , enforced

carrying away of the dispersed phase from the contacting chamber and non-linear decrease of contact time

x ~ (pu)-1. In doing so, the product (Sx) is correlated in such a way that it is a non-monotonous extremal function. Location of its extremum is dependent on the sorption efficiency and can not be estimated a priori.

u Dli

u W 0i H W (0

S

"I

Qj

rS

28

(A

fj

S 20H

M

a

Qj

■ pH

U

¡3

Qj O

O

12

0 0,4 0,3 1,2

Length of the contacting chamber L, m

Fig. 4. Coefficient of the gas mass exchange fiv,g versus height of the contacting chamber Lcont

Design Features

LSA units must provide both the main and some subsidiary technological operations. The inlet section is the domain of the incoming gas flux reorganization (fig. 1). It is designed for gas input and (should the need arise) the cooling of the gas by water injection. These operations can be separated; however, the combined design offers definite advantages. A contacting chamber of typical length/diameter ratio (L/D)cont ~ (1,0 - 1,5) serves for mixing and sorption, as well as regime stabilisation in cases of wide gas load variation or frequent (spontaneous) input/output operations. For this purpose, it can be arranged with a stabilising circular collar. The latter is installed so as to divide the inlet and contact zones. Usually, this collar is the split ring, the details (shape, number of segments and coefficient of wetted passage s = Sfree/Scont) being completely determined by the flow sheet. The height of the liquid bulk in the separation chamber hlevel is usually chosen in such a way as to provide a hydrostatic head on the recycling back-pipes Ah = hlevel - hpipes ~ (0,1 - 0,3) m. In turn, both the overall cross-section of back-pipes Spipes ~ 0,785d2(Ah)1/2/a(2g)1/2 (here a = 1,8-(Ah)0,925-0,61 is the coefficient of liquid discharge) and their total number m ~ Spipes /0,785d2 are dictated by volumetric flux of water 5 and gas speed u. The fixed centrifugal separator also has some special features, particularly the efficiency of phase separation, which is very sensitive with respect to the separator geometry, including number, height, and curvature of curvilinear blades. The dimensions of the separation chamber are dictated primarily by the demands of the total precipitable water (including water vapors and droplets) in the final exhaust, being dependent as well as on the dryness factor of the primary polluted air. For this demand to be fulfilled, the gas speed along the separation chamber usep = F(u, R)air should be smaller than the deposition rate uair(Rair) of airborne water droplets of some definite Rair - drop. Usually, the ratio (L/D)sep ~ (0,6 - 0,8) provides a reasonable solution to this problem. In this case, the ratio between the diameters of the contacting and separation chambers falls in the region Dsep/DCont ~ (ucont /usep)1/2 ~ (2 - 2,5).

In its turn, any LSA can be arranged as a multi-stage unit enclosed in a common shell, any stage in a series being independently optimised along any parameter 910. As this occurs, the next stage is either an identical copy of the preceding stage (so-called cascade LSA) or distinctive in any respect (combined LSA). A cascade LSA is applied for fine cleaning, since the output of the previous stage is simultaneously the input reative to the following one. A combined LSA is used when each taken separately stage is optimized along another parameter.

One Remark of Material Significance

In current engineering practice, the customer demands are a point in any real design. These demands are usually well known. They include efficiency of purification, minimisation of budget investment and/or

operational cost, minimal water consumption, dryness of the exhaust, optimal dimensions, fool-proof design (i.e., safe maintenance achievable with low-skilled operator) and sometimes unforeseen demands. The order of preference (priority) of these demands, together with the given flow sheet, could result not only in simple changes of some details (e.g., dimensions) or even radical ones in design (one, two or three-stage LSA), but often predetermine the possibility of using scrubbing technology. Generally, this priority sequence is unpredictable, hence it should be posed and approved a priori.

Unpredictable priority sequence of customer demands, specificity of LSST hydro/gas-dynamics, variable combination of physico-chemical parameters, character of the particular industrial site, as well as the very essence of scrubbing, lead to the point that LSA manufacturing is not repetitious work. There are sometimes apparent similarities (e.g., the same scale, impurities, physical conditions and degree of purification), which, in fact, are embodied into drastically different real plants. As is evident, to implement particular LSA, both standard design and intuitive engineering solutions (know-how) need to be used. In other words, each real case is unique and requires its own engineering design 8,10-12.

Conclusion

Comparison of relevant sorption and technology LSST ability factors with those of some conven-

3 5 21 22

tional technologies, such as wet-bed3,5 and Venturi tube techniques21,22 can be found in table 1. They show that LSST combines the main merits of conventional co/counter-flow technologies, while being free of their defects.

Two key points that provide the main LSST advantages (primarily high mass-exchange efficiency) are the low absolute gas speed and spontaneous change of the counter-current regime to the co-current one. The decrease of typical gas speeds of conventional co/counter-flow technologies u ~ (20 - 40) m/s down to the typical LSST - speeds u ~ (10 - 20) m/s does not cause deterioration of the process on the whole; on the contrary, it enhances scrubbing efficiency while reduces control requirements. The main LSST merits and demerits can be generalised.

As indicated, both the process as a whole and some of its stages in particular (e.g., mixing, self-fragmentation and phase separation) are very sensitive to the LSA geometric proportions. Hence, more sophisticated and careful study of the engineering design (at the stage of the project development) and manufacturing (at the stage of LSA implementation) are necessary. Design errors or inaccurate manufacturing results in dramatic deterioration of scrubbing efficiency.

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It may be concluded that LSST as a whole presents a successful and effective combination of well-known co-current and counter current technologies. It provides for a stable scrubbing operation and allows for reasonably simple control and monitoring of the latter. The process is conducted by using scrubbers of special design LSA.

Thus, the most specific features of LSA can be summurised as follows:

1. LSA is free of any (e.g., mechanical and/or pressure) load; hence it is safe in operation.

2. LSA has no unreliable structural units (e.g., injectors and/or any moving elements) that need careful maintenance; hence a highly skilled operator is not needed. It is a foolproof and serviceable structure.

3. LSA does not need any auxiliary facilities (e.g., re-circulation pumps).

4. LSA has low hydraulic resistance.

NOMENCLATURE

Design indices

L[m], D [m] and V [m3] - length, diameter and volume, respectively, Physico-chemical indices, p [kg/m3] - density, c [kg/s2] - surface tension, ^ [kg/ms] - dynamic viscosity.

Hydro/gas-dynamic indices

d [m2/s] - diffusion constant (Eq. 1, 2), H [Pa] - hydraulic resistance, u [m/s] - speed, Vg [m3/s] - total gas load, Gl [kg/m3] - liquid-water content, gl [kg], vl[m3] - mass and volumetric holdup of liquid, respectively, gg [kg], vg[m3] - mass and volumetric holdup of gas, respectively, 5 [m3/m2s] - volumetric flux of liquid (current water content).

Heat/mass exchange indices

pvg [m3/m3s] - coefficient of the gas mass exchange (volumetric flux from the gas phase to the liquid phase in relation to the gas volume), pvl [m3/m3s] - coefficient of the liquid mass exchange (volumetric flux from the gas phase to the liquid phase in relation to the whole gas-liquid volume), pvS [m3/m2s] - coefficient of the surface mass exchange (volumetric flux from the gas phase to the liquid phase in relation to the specific interfacial surface), S [m2/m3] - specific interfacial surface (interfacial area per unit volume).

Subscripts and abridgements

cont - contact, f - fall, g - gas, ini - initial, l - liquid, loc - local, s - surface, sep - separation, sf - self-fragmentation.

REFERENCES

1. List and codes of air pollutants, 1991, USSR State Department on Environment Protection, Moscow.

2. Technische Anleitung zur Reinhalyung der Luft (TA Luft), General Administrative Regulation Pertaining the Federal Emission Control Law (Technical instruction on air quality control), 1986, Germany.

3. Chao B.T. Transient heat and mass transfer to a translating droplet. № 91 (2). P. 273 - 281. 1969.

4. Levenspiel O. Chemical reaction engineering. John Willey and sons, Inc., New York-London-Sydney. 1972.

5. Todes, O. M. Wet-bed absorbers (Rus), L., 1983.

6. Gupalo, Y.P., Polianin, A.D., and Riazantzev Y. S. 1985, Heat/mass-exchange between the flow and reacting particles (Rus), Nauka, Moscow.

7. Hesketh, K. C, Howard, E. 1996, Wet scrubbers, Willey, N-Y.

8. Evgrashenko V.V., etal. Low-speed foam absorber. USSR a.c. 748940, ibid. 1982, USSR a.c. 839094.

9. Evgrashenko V.V., Design and industrial installation of co-flow scrubber. Ph. D. Thesis, Institute of Chemical Fertilizers and Poisons, M., 1983.

10. Ivanov V.V. Fast heat/mass-exchange in LSA. Ph. D. Thesis, Institute of Chemical Fertilizers and Poisons. M., 1988

11. Dimitrov V.I., Krainev G., Evgrashenko V.V., Slinko M., Ivanov, V.V. Device for the intensive mass-change. USSR , 1990.

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22. Ollero P. Program calculates Venture-scrubber efficiency // Chemical Engineering. 1984.

Received 4.12.02

Summary

Fundamentals of Low Speed Scrubbing Technology (LSST) are reported. LSST belongs to neither co-flow nor counter flow conventional production strategy. It uses low gas speed ~ (10-20) m/s and spontaneous sequential modification of counter - flow into co-flow. These features provide intensive mass exchange resulting in high scrubbing efficiency (coefficient of the gas mass exchange measures up pv,g ~ (20-30) m3/m3s). This allows for suitable solution of some technological and environmental problems, including industrial exhaust cleaning. LSST embodies scrubbers of special design known as Low Speed Absorbers (LSA). It consists of contacting chamber in series with separation chamber, the former being intended for mixing and interaction of gas and liquid, while the latter provides phase separation. LSA is free of any mechanical or pressure loads, has low hydraulic resistance, has no unreliable structural units and needs no auxiliary facilities. It is a foolproof and serviceable construction.

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