Pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions

The addition of a small amount of long chain polymers to a turbulent fluid is known to reduce the wall shear stress and drag. Similarly, the addition of pulp fibres to a turbulent suspension is also turbulent-drag reducing despite pulp fibres having a length scale that is 1000 times larger than poly...

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Main Author: Abuyousef, Imad Ayesh
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29647
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-296472013-06-05T04:19:00ZPumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensionsAbuyousef, Imad AyeshThe addition of a small amount of long chain polymers to a turbulent fluid is known to reduce the wall shear stress and drag. Similarly, the addition of pulp fibres to a turbulent suspension is also turbulent-drag reducing despite pulp fibres having a length scale that is 1000 times larger than polymer molecules. The mechanism of drag reduction and its impact on centrifugal pump performance is poorly understood, especially when there is a combination of polymer and fibres in suspension. Centrifugal (slurry) pump performance was measured as a function of pulp fibre and PAM polymer concentration. Both the pump best efficiency and maximum head rise were greater when pumping modest concentrations of polymer solutions and low consistency pulp fibre than pure water. We measured an efficiency increase of 22 percent and a maximum head increase of 4.3 percent with the addition of 150 ppm PAM polymer over that of pure water. We measured an increase of 8 percent and 2.3 percent in pump efficiency and maximum head coefficient, respectively, with 2 percent pulp fibres over that of water alone. With both 1 percent consistency pulp fibres and 100 ppm of PAM polymers, we measured a 12 percent increase in efficiency over that of pulp fibre alone. With both 2 percent consistency pulp fibres and 100 ppm of PAM polymers present, we measure an 8 percent increase in efficiency over that of pulp suspension alone. The reasons for the increased pump efficiency with addition of additives is not known but are thought to be due to the turbulent-drag-reducing properties associated with flow of these suspensions.University of British Columbia2010-10-29T14:20:01Z2010-10-29T14:20:01Z20102010-10-29T14:20:01Z2010-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/29647eng
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description The addition of a small amount of long chain polymers to a turbulent fluid is known to reduce the wall shear stress and drag. Similarly, the addition of pulp fibres to a turbulent suspension is also turbulent-drag reducing despite pulp fibres having a length scale that is 1000 times larger than polymer molecules. The mechanism of drag reduction and its impact on centrifugal pump performance is poorly understood, especially when there is a combination of polymer and fibres in suspension. Centrifugal (slurry) pump performance was measured as a function of pulp fibre and PAM polymer concentration. Both the pump best efficiency and maximum head rise were greater when pumping modest concentrations of polymer solutions and low consistency pulp fibre than pure water. We measured an efficiency increase of 22 percent and a maximum head increase of 4.3 percent with the addition of 150 ppm PAM polymer over that of pure water. We measured an increase of 8 percent and 2.3 percent in pump efficiency and maximum head coefficient, respectively, with 2 percent pulp fibres over that of water alone. With both 1 percent consistency pulp fibres and 100 ppm of PAM polymers, we measured a 12 percent increase in efficiency over that of pulp fibre alone. With both 2 percent consistency pulp fibres and 100 ppm of PAM polymers present, we measure an 8 percent increase in efficiency over that of pulp suspension alone. The reasons for the increased pump efficiency with addition of additives is not known but are thought to be due to the turbulent-drag-reducing properties associated with flow of these suspensions.
author Abuyousef, Imad Ayesh
spellingShingle Abuyousef, Imad Ayesh
Pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions
author_facet Abuyousef, Imad Ayesh
author_sort Abuyousef, Imad Ayesh
title Pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions
title_short Pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions
title_full Pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions
title_fullStr Pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions
title_full_unstemmed Pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions
title_sort pumping performance increase through the addition of turbulent drag-reducing polymers to pulp fibre suspensions
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29647
work_keys_str_mv AT abuyousefimadayesh pumpingperformanceincreasethroughtheadditionofturbulentdragreducingpolymerstopulpfibresuspensions
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