The present invention is generally directed to an apparatus for providing rapid mixing of two or more reactants. In particular, the present invention is directed toward providing rapid mixing while eliminating regions of low velocity.
In the current state of the art, rapid mixing is often achieved by the use of impinging jets or solid projections into the flow which promotes mixing by development of large scale flow structures (through a static mixer or swirler arrangement). These flow structures can often lead to flame stabilization which is unacceptable in many applications. One such application is the mixing of oxygen and other reactants for introduction to a fuel cell. Fuel cell mixers are particularly difficult due to the high reaction rate of oxygen with the other reactants and in that, for overall system efficiency considerations, the reactants are often at high temperatures which further increases the reaction rate.
In many applications, there is a need to mix two or more reactants in such a way as to rapidly mix the components while eliminating regions of low velocity. Rapid mixing is necessary to reduce the time that the fluid remains in an intermediate state of mixing. Intermediate mixtures may have an increased reactivity compared to the completely mixed case or may react in such a way as to produce unwanted products. Regions of low velocity, either through stagnation of the flow in the wake of a structure inserted into the flow or through strong recirculations, are undesirable due to the possibility of stabilizing a flame or other region of unwanted rapid reaction.
A streamlined flow mixer according to the present invention is depicted in
The current design produces rapid mixing through two mechanisms. One flow is distributed into the other flow through multiple injection points 21 within stream 20 as shown in
The present invention can also be used for mixing more than two fluids.
Variants of the design include, but are not limited to; (i) the geometric arrangement of the tubes in the bed such as, for example, that described in PCT/US2006/041257; (ii) variation of the geometry of the individual tubes (i.e. varying ratio of the flare, varying the diameters of the tubes, tube wall thickness, tube end geometry, etc.); (iii) extending the mixing by creating additional flow paths by alternating the supply to the interior tubes between two or more fluids, and inclusion of holes (item 31 in
CFD calculations have been conducted to demonstrate the mixing of two fluids at 15 atm. In this case, we are combining a mixture of CO2 and air emitting through the gaps in the end of the tube bed with air passing through the inside diameter of the tubes. Both fluids are at a temperature of 400C. The exit flow data is presented based on unmixedness of the concentration of CO2 (Root Mean Squared Deviation of equivalence ratio/Average equivalence ratio).
Although the invention has been described in considerable detail with respect to arrangements for fluid partitioning, it will be apparent that the invention is capable of numerous modifications and variations, apparent to those skilled in the art, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2007/014806 | Jun 2007 | US | national |
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/816,569 filed Jun. 26, 2006.