Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower

In the pulp and paper industry, the interaction between the gas, liquid, and solid phases occurring in various unit operations is often not clearly understood. Such multi-phase operations include flotation deinking (a separation process of paper fibres in the recycling process) as well as the delig...

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Main Author: Ishkintana, Linda Kate
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1568
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-15682018-01-05T17:22:53Z Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower Ishkintana, Linda Kate Pulp suspensions Hydrodynamics Mass transfer In the pulp and paper industry, the interaction between the gas, liquid, and solid phases occurring in various unit operations is often not clearly understood. Such multi-phase operations include flotation deinking (a separation process of paper fibres in the recycling process) as well as the delignification and bleaching operations in the kraft pulping process. Much of the design, operation, and optimization of such processing equipment are dependent upon past experience as well as trial-and-error methodologies. Pulp fibre suspensions possess a complex and unique rheology. The unpredictability of the behaviour of pulp suspensions at any given mass concentration is due to the bonding between the fibres resulting in network formation (which depends on suspension consistency) with this interaction creating complexity in fluid flow in various unit operations. This thesis describes the gas hydrodynamic behaviour and gas-liquid mass transfer characteristic in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in batch operation. First, the hydrodynamic behaviour of the gas phase (air) in water and pulp suspensions having mass concentrations up to Cm = 7% is examined by visually observing and recording the bubble shape, size, and rise velocity in a rectangular channel. Results are obtained using a high-speed video camera. Second, the hydrodynamic behaviour is described in terms of the gas holdup along with axial and radial gas phase distributions in water and kraft pulp suspensions having mass concentrations between Cm = 0.5 and 9% in a batch-operated cylindrical bubble column. The gas holdup results are compared using three methods: the suspension height method, the pressure difference method, and the electrical resistance tomography (ERT) method. Finally, the volumetric gas-liquid mass transfer characteristic of air in water and kraft pulp suspensions having mass concentrations up to Cm = 4% is examined in the same bubble column in batch-operation using a dissolved oxygen probe. Experimental results were comparable to that in literature for water and for pulp fibre suspensions having Cm < 2%. The presence of fibres had a significant effect on the gas holdup and mass transfer characteristic with results providing insight on the limitations that exist in industrial pulp unit operations. Applied Science, Faculty of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of Graduate 2008-08-28T21:46:02Z 2008-08-28T21:46:02Z 2008 2008-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1568 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 5235860 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Pulp suspensions
Hydrodynamics
Mass transfer
spellingShingle Pulp suspensions
Hydrodynamics
Mass transfer
Ishkintana, Linda Kate
Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower
description In the pulp and paper industry, the interaction between the gas, liquid, and solid phases occurring in various unit operations is often not clearly understood. Such multi-phase operations include flotation deinking (a separation process of paper fibres in the recycling process) as well as the delignification and bleaching operations in the kraft pulping process. Much of the design, operation, and optimization of such processing equipment are dependent upon past experience as well as trial-and-error methodologies. Pulp fibre suspensions possess a complex and unique rheology. The unpredictability of the behaviour of pulp suspensions at any given mass concentration is due to the bonding between the fibres resulting in network formation (which depends on suspension consistency) with this interaction creating complexity in fluid flow in various unit operations. This thesis describes the gas hydrodynamic behaviour and gas-liquid mass transfer characteristic in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in batch operation. First, the hydrodynamic behaviour of the gas phase (air) in water and pulp suspensions having mass concentrations up to Cm = 7% is examined by visually observing and recording the bubble shape, size, and rise velocity in a rectangular channel. Results are obtained using a high-speed video camera. Second, the hydrodynamic behaviour is described in terms of the gas holdup along with axial and radial gas phase distributions in water and kraft pulp suspensions having mass concentrations between Cm = 0.5 and 9% in a batch-operated cylindrical bubble column. The gas holdup results are compared using three methods: the suspension height method, the pressure difference method, and the electrical resistance tomography (ERT) method. Finally, the volumetric gas-liquid mass transfer characteristic of air in water and kraft pulp suspensions having mass concentrations up to Cm = 4% is examined in the same bubble column in batch-operation using a dissolved oxygen probe. Experimental results were comparable to that in literature for water and for pulp fibre suspensions having Cm < 2%. The presence of fibres had a significant effect on the gas holdup and mass transfer characteristic with results providing insight on the limitations that exist in industrial pulp unit operations. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Ishkintana, Linda Kate
author_facet Ishkintana, Linda Kate
author_sort Ishkintana, Linda Kate
title Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower
title_short Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower
title_full Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower
title_fullStr Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower
title_full_unstemmed Gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower
title_sort gas hydrodynamics and mass transfer in low- and medium-consistency pulp suspensions in a retention tower
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1568
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