The invention relates to an apparatus for transporting polymer dispersions, such as for example shear-sensitive polymer dispersions, to be prepared in a stirred-tank reactor.
To avoid the heating up of reactors, such as for example stirred-tank reactors, in which polymer dispersions are prepared, they are assigned external heat exchangers. The polymer dispersion is fed to these in order to dissipate the heat of reaction occurring. For this purpose, the reaction mixture—the polymer dispersion being created—is pumped out of the reactor with a constant mass flow by the heat exchanger. After extracting the heat of reaction, the reaction mixture is returned to the stirred-tank reactor.
The polymer dispersions to be prepared may be very shear-sensitive and may change their viscosity within wide ranges during the preparation process. The polymer dispersions may tend to coagulate and assume a foam-like product consistency, as a result of which the pump circulating the reaction mixture has to meet special requirements. The pump should transport with as little shearing as possible, so that coagulation is prevented, and the pump should be insensitive to gas components in the product to be transported. Furthermore, the pump should be insensitive to a certain amount of deposit formation.
In the transporting of polymer dispersions, as are known under the names Acronal 2010 B, 311 S and Diofan 290 D, so far pumps in which the impellers tend to block after the beginning of polymerization have been used. This was caused by the formation of polymerisate in regions of the impeller where there is a poor through-flow and where deposits have formed, for example on stiffening and reinforcing ribs, then leading to failure of the pumps within a very short time. In the case of previously used configurations, it was unimportant whether the impellers were enclosed by a spiral housing or protruded freely from the pumping space.
On the basis of the prior art outlined, it is an object of the present invention to avoid to the greatest extent the adhering of polymer dispersions to these transporting apparatuses.
This object is achieved according to the invention in the case of an apparatus for transporting polymer dispersions, where it is possible for the apparatus to be driven by a drive and for the impellers of the apparatus to be surrounded by a housing, by a number of vanes being freely mounted in the region of the hub of the impellers in such a way that the pumping spaces on the front side and rear side of the impeller are flowed through uniformly.
The advantage of this solution is that, for low-viscosity, high-viscosity and semi-liquid polymer dispersions, there are no longer any dead spaces at the impellers where the constituents of the dispersions can be deposited in the form of layers one on top of the other. With the solution according to the invention, a relative velocity between the medium and the vane can be retained in the pumping spaces on both sides of the curved vane, so that a relative movement between the medium and the adjacent vanes and the impeller hub is ensured at all times while the medium is in the pumping space.
In a further refinement of the idea underlying the invention, the angle of entry for the medium into the pumping spaces or the impeller pockets of the impeller is between 30° and 120°, preferably 90° at the entry hub. This ensures a uniform inflow of the medium, such as for example a shear-sensitive polymer dispersion. Between six and twelve individual vanes may be mounted on the hub of the impeller, the number of vanes being dependent on the overall diameter of the impeller, the viscosity of the shear-sensitive products to be transported and the rotational speed of the drive. For reasons of optimum efficiency of the impeller according to the invention, eight vanes are mounted on the circumference of the hub.
To reduce the shear occurring, and to avoid the formation of deposits and permit improved cleaning of the impeller, the entire impeller may preferably be provided with a conductive PFA coating.
The vanes bounding the pumping spaces of the impeller have the same curvature on their front side, the delivery side, and on their rear side, the suction side. Thus, the front side and rear side may have the same radius of curvature, with the edges of all the vanes being of a well-rounded design in order not to hinder the flow movement of the shear-sensitive polymer dispersions around the individual vanes and in the region of the shaft hub.
In a design variant, the curvature of the center lines of the individual vanes between the center of the hub and the outer enveloping curve may describe a segment of a circle, which allows easier production of the vane geometry. The cross-sectional area of the individual vanes connected to the hub of the impeller is dimensioned in such a way that the areas bounding the pumping space on the delivery and suction sides of the vanes are wider than the material thickness of the vanes. For strength reasons, the material thickness must not be less than a certain value, it also being necessary for the design of the impeller with respect to mechanical strength to take into consideration the rotational speed and the media to be transported by the impeller according to the invention.
If an impeller according to the invention is arranged centrally in a spiral housing surrounding it, the desired transporting rates can advantageously be achieved already at relatively low drive speeds, the material stress occurring being relatively low in comparison with stresses occurring at higher speeds, which considerably increases the service life of the impeller.
The impeller according to the invention allows transporting from a stirred-tank reactor into a heat exchanger for extracting the exothermic heat of reaction that avoids the coagulation of shear-sensitive polymer dispersions and can be provided particularly advantageously in the associated circulating system. The impeller itself may both protrude freely into the pumping space and be enclosed by a housing, depending on the intended application.
The invention is explained in more detail below with reference to the drawing, in which:
In the representation according to
The impeller 28 is fastened at its shaft hub 1 onto a drive shaft of a drive and has a number of vanes 2, which are all fastened to the hub 1. The individual vanes 2 are of a relatively large vane width 4 in comparison with their material thickness 3 and have a substantially rectangular cross-sectional profile. Formed between the individual vanes 2 are pumping spaces 5, which are bounded by a respective vane front side 7 and a vane rear side 8. The vane front side 7 represents the delivery side, while the vane rear side 8 represents the suction side of the runner at the impeller 28. The individual vanes 2 are formed in a vane curvature 9, which extends from the respective vane root 10 along the center line 11 of the vanes 2 to the enveloping curve 6, which encloses the ends of all the vanes 2 of the impeller 28.
With respect to the tangents to the center lines 11 in the region of the vane roots 10 of the vanes 2, the individual vanes 2 are arranged in relation to one another by the pitch angle 12. The free spaces 14 formed between two vane roots 10 are arranged offset in relation to one another by the pitch angle 13, with the pitch angle 12 for the vanes 2 and the pitch angle 13 for the free spaces 14 both being 45° when there are eight vanes 2 on the impeller 28. The vanes 2 may, for example, describe with their center line 11 a segment of a circle between the enveloping curve 6 and the center of the hub 1, as indicated in
The vanes 2 each have a front side 7 and a rear side 8, the front side 7 and the rear side 8 having identical paths of curvature. The free arrangement of the vanes 2 around the hub 1 has the effect that no dead spaces occur in the pumping spaces, so that a relative movement between the polymer dispersion and the impeller 28 is ensured at all times. Since relative movements occur between the medium and the contact areas on the impeller 28 at all times and at every location during the flowing through of the pumping spaces 5, only minimal deposits of polymerized through material are able to form on the impeller 28 and on the housing surrounding it.
As a result of the direction of rotation 20 of the impeller 28, the respective delivery side of the runner is formed on the front side 7 of the vanes 2, while the suction side, replenished by new medium to be transported, is formed on the rear side 8 of the vanes 2. The vanes 2 are in each case of a well-rounded form in the region of their edges, so that a flow with as little shearing as possible is established around the individual vanes 2 on the impeller 28. The length and path of curvature of the individual vanes 2 determine the diameter 29 of the impeller 28, the length of the vanes 2 being dimensioned such that they have adequate strength properties even in their end regions near the enveloping curve 6.
The ends of the vanes 2 lie within the enveloping curve 6; their respective center line 11 is formed with a radius of curvature 21 which is less than the radius of curvature 9 represented in
The pumping spaces 5 or impeller pockets 25 are bounded by the curved front sides 7, the delivery sides, and the curved rear sides 8, the suction sides, of the vanes 2. In the region of the vane root 10 (cf.
The impeller 28 may be produced from metal, particular attention having to be paid to deburring of the contact regions of the individual vanes 2. In addition to production from one piece, the individual vanes 2 may also be fastened in the region of the hub 2 on the outer circumference of the latter, for instance by means of a thermal joining process, before a coating of the outer surfaces takes place with a conductive material, such as PFA for example.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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19940399.6 | Aug 1999 | DE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10069366 | Feb 2002 | US |
Child | 11205068 | Aug 2005 | US |