The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing
The competitive, consecutive azo coupling between 1-naphthol and diazotized sulphanilic acid was used to investigate the mixing of a pulp fibre suspension in a stirred tank reactor operated in a semi-batch mode. The distribution between the mono and bis substituted product dyes depended upon the...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-54452014-03-14T15:40:15Z The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing Thangavel, V. K. The competitive, consecutive azo coupling between 1-naphthol and diazotized sulphanilic acid was used to investigate the mixing of a pulp fibre suspension in a stirred tank reactor operated in a semi-batch mode. The distribution between the mono and bis substituted product dyes depended upon the turbulent intensity in the reaction zone and was used to indicate the degree of mixing in the vessel. Coupling reactions were carried out under conditions where macromixing did not influence the product distribution and were used to indicate the turbulent dissipation and microscale mixing in the reaction zone. When fibres were present in the reactor some of the product dyes were adsorbed onto the fibres. Adsorption rate was not proportional to the equilibrium concentration of the dyes and it was necessary to correct the measured product distribution to account for the differential adsorption rates. Once this correction had been made the product distribution correctly indicated the degree of mixing. As the dyes were found to have different affinities for different pulps, separate correlations would have to be developed for each pulp tested. All results reported here were obtained with a commercially produced fully bleached kraft pulp. Tests were conducted in the stirred vessel using aqueous media and at fibre suspension concentrations up to 2.5% by mass. Test results in aqueous media compared favourably with past work and a predictive model developed by Baldyga and Bourne. In the presence of fibres a reduction in turbulent energy dissipation was detected under most operating conditions when compared with the aqueous tests. When the suspension mass concentration was increased to the point where the vessel contents ceased to be in complete motion the product distribution began to increase due to macroscale mixing effects. The technique could not be applied successfully to a high-shear mixer due to the high energy dissipation rates and dye adsorption, both of which reduced the product distribution below the analytical detection limit. While other mixing sensitive chemical reactions are available to permit mixing determination at these high dissipation rates, the extension of the reaction system to more than 3 adsorbable components would make the measurements difficult to conduct and interpret. 2009-03-03T23:22:23Z 2009-03-03T23:22:23Z 1992 2009-03-03T23:22:23Z 1992-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5445 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/] |
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NDLTD |
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English |
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description |
The competitive, consecutive azo coupling between 1-naphthol and diazotized sulphanilic
acid was used to investigate the mixing of a pulp fibre suspension in a stirred tank reactor
operated in a semi-batch mode. The distribution between the mono and bis substituted
product dyes depended upon the turbulent intensity in the reaction zone and was used to
indicate the degree of mixing in the vessel. Coupling reactions were carried out under
conditions where macromixing did not influence the product distribution and were used to
indicate the turbulent dissipation and microscale mixing in the reaction zone.
When fibres were present in the reactor some of the product dyes were adsorbed onto
the fibres. Adsorption rate was not proportional to the equilibrium concentration of the dyes
and it was necessary to correct the measured product distribution to account for the
differential adsorption rates. Once this correction had been made the product distribution
correctly indicated the degree of mixing. As the dyes were found to have different affinities
for different pulps, separate correlations would have to be developed for each pulp tested.
All results reported here were obtained with a commercially produced fully bleached kraft
pulp. Tests were conducted in the stirred vessel using aqueous media and at fibre suspension
concentrations up to 2.5% by mass.
Test results in aqueous media compared favourably with past work and a predictive model developed by Baldyga and Bourne. In the presence of fibres a reduction in turbulent
energy dissipation was detected under most operating conditions when compared with the
aqueous tests. When the suspension mass concentration was increased to the point where
the vessel contents ceased to be in complete motion the product distribution began to increase
due to macroscale mixing effects.
The technique could not be applied successfully to a high-shear mixer due to the high
energy dissipation rates and dye adsorption, both of which reduced the product distribution
below the analytical detection limit. While other mixing sensitive chemical reactions are
available to permit mixing determination at these high dissipation rates, the extension of the
reaction system to more than 3 adsorbable components would make the measurements
difficult to conduct and interpret. |
author |
Thangavel, V. K. |
spellingShingle |
Thangavel, V. K. The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing |
author_facet |
Thangavel, V. K. |
author_sort |
Thangavel, V. K. |
title |
The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing |
title_short |
The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing |
title_full |
The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing |
title_fullStr |
The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing |
title_full_unstemmed |
The use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing |
title_sort |
use of mixing-sensitive chemical reactions for the study of pulp fibre suspension mixing |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5445 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT thangavelvk theuseofmixingsensitivechemicalreactionsforthestudyofpulpfibresuspensionmixing AT thangavelvk useofmixingsensitivechemicalreactionsforthestudyofpulpfibresuspensionmixing |
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