Chemical Engineering Science, Vol.64, No.8, 1806-1819, 2009
Turbulence modelling of multiphase flow in high-pressure trickle-bed reactors
Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has been used as a successful tool for single-phase reactors. However, fixed-bed reactors design depends overly in empirical correlations for the prediction of heat and mass transfer phenomena. Therefore, the aim of this work is to present the application of CFD to the simulation of three-dimensional interstitial flow in a multiphase reactor. A case study comprising a high-pressure trickle-bed reactor (30 bar) was modelled by means of anEuler-Euler CFD model. The numerical simulations were evaluated quantitatively by experimental data from the literature. During grid optimization and validation, the effects of mesh size, time step and convergence criteria were evaluated plotting the hydrodynamic predictions as a function of liquid flow rate. Among the discretization methods for the momentum equation, a monotonic upwind scheme for conservation laws was found to give better computed results for either liquid holdup or two-phase pressure drop since it reduces effectively the numerical dispersion in convective terms of transport equation. After the parametric optimization of numerical solution parameters, four RANS multiphase turbulence models were investigated in the whole range of simulated gas and liquid flow rates. During RANS turbulence modelling, standard k-epsilon dispersed turbulence model gave the better compromise between computer expense and numerical accuracy in comparison with both realizable, renormalization group and Reynolds stress based models. Finally, several computational runs were performed at different temperatures for the evaluation of either axial averaged velocity and turbulent kinetic energy profiles for gas and liquid phases. Flow disequilibrium and strong heterogeneities detected along the packed bed demonstrated liquid distribution issues with slighter impact at high temperatures. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Computational fluid dynamics;Trickle-bed reactor;Euler-Euler;Turbulence;Liquid holdup;Pressure drop