Advanced Fluidization
Advanced Fluidization
Introduction Outline
Characterization Of Individual Particles The design of any operation involving 1 Introduction
particles requires precise information on 2 Particle density
their properties
3 Particle size
The most important properties are density, 4 Particle shape
size and shape
5 Adhesion of particles
Cedric Briens September 7, 2016
This chapter defines these properties and 6 Dustiness
reviews the techniques for their
measurement
1 2 3
What is the
2. Particle density What is the Skeletal density? apparent particle density?
Density of the material from which particles mass of particle
Up
Skeletal density are formed: Usk volume of particle (including pores)
non-porouss non-porouss
non-porouss non-porouss
Bulk density
4 5 6
Relationship between Up and Usk What is the bulk density? Relationship between Ub and Up
10 11 12
Loose or aerated bulk density Compact or tapped bulk density Skeletal density measurement
movie
16 17 18
Liquid pycnometry Gas pycnometry
Particle density measurement
Outline
1 Introduction
FCC
2 Particle density
tertiary
3 Particle size FCC
4 Particle shape
cyclone
5 Adhesion of particles catch
6 Dustiness
22 23 24
Talcum
Polymer C Polymer W
powder
25 26 27
Characterizing the size of a Particle size cuts
particle with a complex shape Size cut i contains 0.18
28 29 30
31 32 33
Comparison of various mean diameters for a typical size distribution Cumulative distribution Differential distribution
arithmetic mean diameter, Pm 221
100
from log-mean or geometric mean diameter, Pm 168
90
0.3
80
volume % harmonic or Sauter mean diameter, Pm 99
70
40
arithmetic mean diameter, Pm 1.3
30
derivative, wt%/Pm
0.1
from log-mean or geometric mean diameter, Pm 1.0 20
10
weight % with a diameter smaller than dp
Use Excel (or FBMODX) For example, two measurement techniques Useful for smoothing and interpolation
may provide the size distribution of a
sample for 2 different ranges of particle size Do not use for extrapolation
37 38 39
d 2
ln pi
pi pam
d d 2
exp 2
d plm
2V exp 2
F(d p ) 1 exp ad sp
dp 2 ln V
F(d p ) d(d ) g
pi
0 V 2S dp
d(d )
pi
F(d p ) 0 ln V g 2S
d pi
40 41 42
70
70
50
50
30
30
10
10
Plotting with probably scale axis:
Fd p 1 exp X E
1) Use Sigmaplot or Origin commercial software 1
1
0.1
or 0.1
weight % with a diameter smaller than dp
0.01
0.001
0.001
1 10 100
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
43 particle diameter (dp), Pm 44 particle diameter (dp), Pm 45
Particle size measurement Particle size measurement Particle size measurement
Accurate sampling is a crucial operation: more
errors can be attributed to sampling than to the
actual size analysis.
The two "golden rules of sampling" (Allen):
1) "a powder should be sampled while in motion" (to
prevent segregation in non- moving powders) (movie;
brazil nut movie; humans in snow avalanches)
2) "the whole of the stream should be taken for many
short increments of time in preference to part of the
stream being taken for the whole of the time"
(segregation movie).
With fine particles, sample dispersion is also movie
important. 46 47 48
64 65 66
99.99 99.99
99.95 99.95
99.9 99.9
99.8 99.8
99 99
98 98
95 95
90 90
80 80
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
% below dp
30 30
% below dp
20 20
10 10
5 5
2 2
1 1
0.5 0.5
0.2 0.2
0.1 0.1
0.05 0.05
0.01 0.01
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 1 10 100
67 68
dp
dp