The disclosure of the present patent application relates to gas-liquid reactors, and particularly to a confined plunging liquid jet reactor with energy recovery.
There are many industrial processes where it is necessary to mix a gas, such as air, with a liquid. Although sometimes a simple sparged system with a tube or air stone releasing bubbles directly below the surface of the water will suffice, for some processes, e.g., aerobic wastewater treatment, air pollution abatement, froth flotation, and fermentation, an improved gas absorption rate is desirable. In such circumstances, a plunging jet reactor may be used to achieve a high mass transfer rate at low capital and operating cost.
Plunging jet devices improve gas absorption rates by creating a fine dispersion of bubbles and by increasing the contact time between the gas bubbles and the liquid at relatively low power inputs. A plunging jet may be operated as an unconfined device or as a confined device. In an unconfined plunging jet reactor system, a liquid jet plunges into an open liquid pool, creating a conical downflow dispersion of fine bubbles and a surrounding upflow of larger, coalesced bubbles. The penetration depth of the bubbles is small due to the spreading of the submerged jet, and hence the bubble contact time with the liquid is short.
In a confined system, a Confined Plunging Liquid Jet Reactor (CPLJR) uses a vertical tube or downcomer column that surrounds the liquid jet and that is partially immersed in a receiving liquid pool contained in a reservoir. Hence, the entrained bubbles may be carried to large depths by the liquid downflow. The top end of the tube is connected to a nozzle, while the other end (bottom) is left open to the receiving liquid pool.
Additionally, it would be desirable to be able to recover energy from the system, since the combined liquid and gas flowing into the receiving tank 116 has kinetic energy which, in the conventional prior art system of
The confined plunging liquid jet reactor with energy recovery includes a downcomer having an upper end, an open lower end, and a gas inlet for receiving gas from an external source. The downcomer is disposed in a tank holding a reservoir of liquid and defines a hollow column extending into the reservoir. A nozzle is mounted on the upper end of the downcomer for receiving a pressurized liquid from an external source, such as a recirculating pump or the like, and is configured to generate a liquid jet downward in the hollow column. A riser tube or pipe is coaxially disposed around the downcomer and extends somewhat deeper than the downcomer, defining an annular air lift column around the downcomer that receives bubbles of gas that were not entrained in liquid in the downcomer as they exit the downcomer, providing an annular path for the gas bubbles to rise to the surface of the reservoir. The jet of pressurized liquid creates turbulence and bubbles of gas in the liquid reservoir when the jet impacts the surface of the liquid reservoir in the downcomer to entrain the gas in the liquid reservoir, and to further form a two-phase fluid formed from liquid and the gas.
A turbine is placed in fluid communication with the upper end of the riser. Upward movement of the two-phase fluid within the riser drives the turbine. The turbine is coupled to a generator for producing electrical energy.
In an alternative embodiment, an annular mesh sieve may be mounted on, and extend between, an outer surface of the downcomer and an inner surface of the riser. The annular mesh sieve breaks up the bubbles in the rising two-phase fluid into finer bubbles with decreased surface areas, which leads to higher oxygen mass transfer between the gas bubbles and the surrounding liquid, thus augmenting dissolved gas concentration in the liquid without extra cost.
These and other features of the present disclosure will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
As shown in
The nozzle 12 is vertically oriented and creates a high velocity jet of liquid 14 that impinges into a body of liquid 16 located beneath the nozzle 12. Gas G is drawn into the process near the point of impingement through gas inlet 26, or the gas may be air from the headspace in the downcomer above the liquid 16. The plunging jet 14 impinges into the body of liquid 16, which is confined by the downcomer 18. The downward force of the plunging jet 14 fights buoyancy forces of the entrained gas G within a mixing zone 20. The gas-liquid mixture (G+L) flows down through a pipe flow zone 22, such that the liquid and excess gas both flow downward to exit the downcomer 18 at its open lower end 28 into a riser 30. As shown, the riser 30 is a tube of pipe positioned within tank 24 and having a greater diameter than the downcomer 18. The riser 30 is coaxially disposed around the downcomer 18, which serves as a liquid reservoir, the reservoir serving as the source of the liquid 16 in the downcomer 18 that the jet 14 of pressurized liquid impacts. The open lower end 31 of riser 30 is in open communication with the reservoir of liquid 16 contained in the tank 24. The riser 30 extends deeper into the tank 24 than the downcomer 18. The riser 30 defines an annular air lift column between the downcomer 18 and the riser 30 that provides a path for any gas bubbles exiting the downcomer to rise to the surface of the reservoir of liquid 16 in the tank 24.
As further shown in
Since the two-phase gas and liquid mixture (L+G) rises within the riser 30, it carries energy, which, in a conventional CPLJR, is simply lost to fluid resistance, friction and convection. However, as shown in
The apparatus 10 of
In the embodiment of
It is to be understood that the confined plunging liquid jet reactor with energy recovery is not limited to the specific embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the generic language of the following claims enabled by the embodiments described herein, or otherwise shown in the drawings or described above in terms sufficient to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the claimed subject matter.
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Entry |
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Al-Anzi, “Air Entrainment Rates in a Confined Plunging Liquid Jet Reactor,” Mar. 2006; printed from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323945520_AIR_ENTRAINMENT_RATES_IN_A_CONFINED_PLUNGING_LIQUID_JET_REACTOR. |
Al-Anzi, “Performance of a novel confined plunging jet reactor incorporating an annular air lift column,” Doctoral Thesis. Loughborough University, 2007. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220176327 A1 | Jun 2022 | US |