화학공학소재연구정보센터
Chemical Engineering Science, Vol.65, No.10, 3341-3351, 2010
Constitutive model to predict flow of cohesive powders in bench scale hoppers
This communication empirically correlates flow in two systems; an instrumented rotating drum (GDR) and a set of bench scale hoppers. A flow index obtained from measurements in the GDR is directly correlated to the flow through hoppers, providing a predictive method for hopper design and a convenient experimental test for screening materials and determining their suitability for specific hopper systems. Simulations were performed to understand the dynamics of flow in hoppers by using the same flow parameters in hoppers and rotating cylinders. Simulations showed that as cohesion increased it becomes harder for the particles to flow through the hoppers, in good agreement with the experiments. The effect of hopper angle also yields similar findings to experiments for Avicel, K=60, where the powder does not flow through the 45 degrees hopper but flows well in a 75 degrees hopper. Simulations were also used to calculate the normal forces on the walls of the hopper and the wall pressure distributions in both hoppers. As depth increases, the wall pressure increases for all cases. Finally, the simulations also helped understand the different flow behaviors (funnel and mass flow) that take place in a hopper. The simulated dynamics of flow in the rotating drum and in the hopper correlate very closely to experiments, indicating that the model cohesion parameters are, as desirable, material-specific but independent of geometry. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.