Simulation of Spray Polymerisation and Structure Generation in Spray Drying by Single Droplet Models
Spray polymerisation has a long time been discussed as a promising process, yet, with little knowledge on cause-and-effect relationships between drying and chemical reactions. This work develops a new single droplet model of combined solution drying and free radical homopolymerisation, based on the...
Other Authors: | |
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Format: | eBook |
Language: | Inglés |
Published: |
Berlin, Germany :
Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH
2022.
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Subjects: | |
See on Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009720293606719 |
Table of Contents:
- List of Symbols xv
- List of Figures xxi
- List of Tables xxv
- 1 Introduction: Spray Drying and Reactive Drying Processes 1
- 1.1 Spray Polymerisation. 2
- 1.2 Single Droplet Models for Spray Drying . 3
- 1.3 Meshfree Methods, Simulation of Structure Evolution4
- 1.3.1 Previous Applications of SPH to Drying . 5
- 2 Theoretical Principles 7
- 2.1 Transport Equations 7
- 2.1.1 Transport in a Mass Averaged System 9
- 2.1.2 Transport in a Molar Averaged System . 13
- 2.1.3 Reference Velocities and Conversion between Systems . 13
- 2.1.4 Eulerian and Lagrangian Frames of Reference16
- 2.2 Diffusion . 17
- 2.2.1 Fickian Diffusion . 17
- 2.2.2 Maxwell-Stefan Diffusion 19
- 2.2.3 Determination of Diffusion Coefficients . 21
- 2.3 Modelling of Free Radical Polymerisation 21
- 2.3.1 Reactions in Free Radical Polymerisation 22
- 2.3.2 Quasi-Steady-State Assumption (QSSA) 27
- 2.3.3 Method of Moments . 28
- 2.4 Mixture Thermodynamics 31
- 2.4.1 Vapour Liquid Equilibrium at the Droplet's Surface . 32
- 2.4.2 Calculation of Activity Coefficients . 33
- 2.4.3 The UNIFAC Equations . 34
- 2.5 Spray Drying: Basic Assumptions 35
- 2.5.1 Approximate Residence Time in a Spray Dryer . 36
- 2.5.2 Heat and Mass Transfer . 37
- 2.5.3 Inner Circulation Inside a Droplet 38
- 2.5.4 Are Droplets Fully Mixed? 40
- 3 Modelling of Reactive Droplet Drying and Polymerisation 41
- 3.1 Transport in a Reaction-Diffusion System 42
- 3.1.1 Constant Physical Properties. 44
- 3.1.2 Consideration of Mixture Effects . 46
- 3.1.3 Diffusion and Reaction Driven Convection at Variable
- Molar Weights47
- 3.1.4 Transport of Polymer - Quasi-Steady-State Assumption . 50
- 3.1.5 Transport of Statistical Moments . 52
- 3.2 Lumped Modelling - 0D approach 56
- 3.2.1 General Equations for Reactive Spray Drying57
- 3.2.2 Spray Polymerisation - Quasi-Steady-State Assumption 58
- 3.2.3 Spray Polymerisation - Method of Moments. 59
- 3.3 Distributed Modelling - 1D approach. 60
- 3.3.1 General Equations of the Droplet Continuum60
- 3.3.2 Boundary Conditions . 62
- 3.3.3 Spray Polymerisation - QSSA66
- 3.3.4 Spray Polymerisation - Method of Moments. 68
- 3.4 Comparison with Existing Models 69
- 3.5 Implementational Considerations . 70
- 3.5.1 Implementation of the Moving Boundary Problem . 70
- 3.5.2 Boundary Conditions . 71
- 3.5.3 Treatment of Convection Terms . 72
- 3.5.4 Implementation of Diffusion. 75
- 3.6 Verification of the Transport Approach76
- 3.6.1 Diffusion Driven Convection, Constant Properties 76
- 3.6.2 Diffusion Driven Convection, Variable Molar Weight 79
- 3.6.3 Diffusion Driven Convection, Excess Volumes . 82
- 3.6.4 Reaction Induced Convection85
- 4 Simulation of Spray Polymerisation 87
- 4.1 Kinetics and Process Conditions . 88
- 4.2 Lumped Simulation of Droplet Polymerisation 92
- 4.2.1 Principle Course of the Process -
- Plain Kinetics, no Monomer Evaporation 92
- 4.2.2 Effects of Kinetics on the Process 94
- 4.3 Spatial Effects in Droplet Polymerisation 98
- 4.3.1 Effect of the Diffusion Coefficient on Concentration Gradients . 99
- 4.3.2 Inhomogeneities of the Product at Small Diffusion Coefficients, Effect of Moments' Diffusion . 102
- 4.3.3 Effect of Monomer Evaporation . 106
- 4.3.4 Pre-polymerisation Before Atomisation . 111
- 4.3.5 Polymerisation at Elevated Monomer Content in the Drying Gas 116
- 4.3.6 Influence of Non-Ideality of Activities 122
- 4.3.7 Interaction with the drying gas125
- 4.3.8 Applicability of the QSSA model 131
- 4.4 Summary of Basic Findings on Droplet Polymerisation . 133
- 4.5 Process Evaluation, Numerical DoEs. 135
- 4.5.1 DoEs' Setup and Evaluation. 135
- 4.5.2 Droplet Polymerisation with Solvent in the Feed 138
- 4.5.3 Bulk Polymerisation within a Droplet 142
- 4.5.4 Bulk Feed with Pre-Polymerisation before Atomisation . 149
- 4.6 Discussion and Suggestions for Further Research 153
- 5 SPH and its Application to Single Droplet Slurry Drying 155
- 5.1 Mathematical Derivation . 156
- 5.1.1 SPH Interpolation 156
- 5.1.2 Integral Approximations . 159
- 5.1.3 First Derivatives . 160
- 5.1.4 Laplace-Operator and Divergence of Diffusive Fluxes 162
- 5.1.5 General Second Derivatives. 165
- 5.1.6 Choice of Kernel, Smoothing Length and Cut-off Radius 165
- 5.1.7 Correction of the SPH Approximation 168
- 5.2 Implementation of Boundary Conditions . 169
- 5.2.1 Ghost Particles169
- 5.2.2 Insertion of Boundary Conditions into SPH Equations . 171
- 5.2.3 Repulsive Forces as Hard Sphere Boundaries172
- 5.3 Hydrodynamics of an Incompressible Liquid in SPH173
- 5.3.1 Continuity Equation, Density Evaluation 173
- 5.3.2 Momentum Balance . 175
- 5.3.3 Weakly Compressible SPH 178
- 5.4 Incompressible SPH 179
- 5.4.1 Boundary Conditions in ISPH182
- 5.4.2 Boundaries by the Ghost Technique, Wall Boundaries 182
- 5.4.3 Free Surface Boundaries in ISPH 183
- 5.4.4 Modifications to ISPH in This Work . 184
- 5.5 Surface Tension and Wetting . 189
- 5.5.1 The Interparticle Force Approach 190
- 5.5.2 The Concept of Surface-Lateral Particle Forces . 195
- 5.6 Representation of the Solid Phase 200
- 5.6.1 Primary Particles in the Slurry200
- 5.6.2 Calculation of Crust Formation . 202
- 5.7 Modelling of Drying Phenomena in SPH . 205
- 5.7.1 Heat Conduction . 205
- 5.7.2 Implementation of Linear Driving Force based Heat and
- Mass Transfer into SPH . 205
- 5.7.3 Extension to the Second Drying Period . 208
- 5.7.4 Treatment of Evaporation Concerning Particle Mass and
- Deletion 209
- 5.7.5 Modelling of Diffusion Driven Drying Involving the Gas
- Phase . 210
- 5.8 Time Integration 213
- 5.8.1 Stability Criteria in Explicit Time Stepping. 214
- 5.8.2 Time Stepping Criteria Employed in This Work and Their
- Reference Length . 216
- 5.8.3 Implicit Solution of Diffusive Equations . 218
- 5.8.4 Initialisation of an SPH Calculation . 220
- 6 Validation of the SPH Implementation 221
- 6.1 Implicit Solution of Heat Conduction. 221
- 6.2 Heat and Mass Transfer by Linear Driving Forces 224
- 6.2.1 Heat Transfer to a Unilaterally Heated Rod. 224
- 6.2.2 Coupled Heat and Mass Transfer: Droplet Evaporation . 226
- 6.3 Diffusion Driven Drying by SPH-Grid Coupling . 228
- 6.4 SPH Flow Solver . 230
- 6.4.1 ISPH Solution of a Standing Water Column. 230
- 6.4.2 Free Surface Flow 231
- 6.4.3 Surface Tension Approach of Pairwise Forces234
- 6.4.4 Wetting Phenomena . 237
- 7 Simulation of Structure Evolution During Drying 243
- 7.1 Simulation of the First Drying Period243
- 7.2 Simulation of Crust Formation 245
- 7.2.1 Simulation of the Second Drying Period without Crust
- Formation . 245
- 7.2.2 Crust Formation by Caught on First Touch. 247
- 7.2.3 Crust Formation Determined by the Water Content . 249
- 7.2.4 Effect of the Density Correction . 250
- 7.3 Influence of Adjustable Parameters on the Structure. 251
- 7.4 Effect of the Temperature . 256
- 7.5 Variation of the Resolution 259
- 7.6 Drying of a Microporous Structure 261
- 7.7 Comments on numerical efficiency 267
- 8 Conclusion 269
- A Numerical Regression by Gaussian Processes 273
- B FVM Implementation of the Droplet Polymerisation Model 277
- C Implementational Aspects of SPH 281
- C.1 Neighbourhood Search281
- C.1.1 Linked List 281
- C.1.2 Verlet List . 282
- C.2 Performance Aspects, Memory Alignment 282List of Symbols xv
- List of Figures xxi
- List of Tables xxv
- 1 Introduction: Spray Drying and Reactive Drying Processes 1
- 1.1 Spray Polymerisation. 2
- 1.2 Single Droplet Models for Spray Drying . 3
- 1.3 Meshfree Methods, Simulation of Structure Evolution4
- 1.3.1 Previous Applications of SPH to Drying . 5
- 2 Theoretical Principles 7
- 2.1 Transport Equations 7
- 2.1.1 Transport in a Mass Averaged System 9
- 2.1.2 Transport in a Molar Averaged System .
- 13
- 2.1.3 Reference Velocities and Conversion between Systems . 13
- 2.1.4 Eulerian and Lagrangian Frames of Reference16
- 2.2 Diffusion . 17
- 2.2.1 Fickian Diffusion . 17
- 2.2.2 Maxwell-Stefan Diffusion 19
- 2.2.3 Determination of Diffusion Coefficients . 21
- 2.3 Modelling of Free Radical Polymerisation 21
- 2.3.1 Reactions in Free Radical Polymerisation 22
- 2.3.2 Quasi-Steady-State Assumption (QSSA) 27
- 2.3.3 Method of Moments .
- 28
- 2.4 Mixture Thermodynamics 31
- 2.4.1 Vapour Liquid Equilibrium at the Droplet's Surface . 32
- 2.4.2 Calculation of Activity Coefficients . 33
- 2.4.3 The UNIFAC Equations . 34
- 2.5 Spray Drying: Basic Assumptions 35
- 2.5.1 Approximate Residence Time in a Spray Dryer . 36
- 2.5.2 Heat and Mass Transfer . 37
- 2.5.3 Inner Circulation Inside a Droplet 38
- 2.5.4 Are Droplets Fully Mixed? 40
- 3 Modelling of Reactive Droplet Drying and Polymerisation 41
- 3.1 Transport in a Reaction-Diffusion System 42
- 3.1.1 Constant Physical Properties. 44
- 3.1.2 Consideration of Mixture Effects . 46
- 3.1.3 Diffusion and Reaction Driven Convection at Variable
- Molar Weights47
- 3.1.4 Transport of Polymer - Quasi-Steady-State Assumption . 50
- 3.1.5 Transport of Statistical Moments . 52
- 3.2 Lumped Modelling - 0D approach 56
- 3.2.1 General Equations for Reactive Spray Drying57
- 3.2.2 Spray Polymerisation - Quasi-Steady-State Assumption 58
- 3.2.3 Spray Polymerisation - Method of Moments. 59
- 3.3 Distributed Modelling - 1D approach. 60
- 3.3.1 General Equations of the Droplet Continuum60
- 3.3.2 Boundary Conditions . 62
- 3.3.3 Spray Polymerisation - QSSA66
- 3.3.4 Spray Polymerisation - Method of Moments. 68
- 3.4 Comparison with Existing Models 69
- 3.5 Implementational Considerations . 70
- 3.5.1 Implementation of the Moving Boundary Problem . 70
- 3.5.2 Boundary Conditions . 71
- 3.5.3 Treatment of Convection Terms . 72
- 3.5.4 Implementation of Diffusion. 75
- 3.6 Verification of the Transport Approach76
- 3.6.1 Diffusion Driven Convection, Constant Properties 76
- 3.6.2 Diffusion Driven Convection, Variable Molar Weight 79
- 3.6.3 Diffusion Driven Convection, Excess Volumes . 82
- 3.6.4 Reaction Induced Convection85
- 4 Simulation of Spray Polymerisation 87
- 4.1 Kinetics and Process Conditions . 88
- 4.2 Lumped Simulation of Droplet Polymerisation 92
- 4.2.1 Principle Course of the Process -
- Plain Kinetics, no Monomer Evaporation 92
- 4.2.2 Effects of Kinetics on the Process 94
- 4.3 Spatial Effects in Droplet Polymerisation 98
- 4.3.1 Effect of the Diffusion Coefficient on Concentration Gradients . 99
- 4.3.2 Inhomogeneities of the Product at Small Diffusion Coefficients, Effect of Moments' Diffusion . 102
- 4.3.3 Effect of Monomer Evaporation . 106
- 4.3.4 Pre-polymerisation Before Atomisation . 111
- 4.3.5 Polymerisation at Elevated Monomer Content in the Drying Gas 116
- 4.3.6 Influence of Non-Ideality of Activities 122
- 4.3.7 Interaction with the drying gas125
- 4.3.8 Applicability of the QSSA model 131
- 4.4 Summary of Basic Findings on Droplet Polymerisation . 133
- 4.5 Process Evaluation, Numerical DoEs. 135
- 4.5.1 DoEs' Setup and Evaluation. 135
- 4.5.2 Droplet Polymerisation with Solvent in the Feed 138
- 4.5.3 Bulk Polymerisation within a Droplet 142
- 4.5.4 Bulk Feed with Pre-Polymerisation before Atomisation . 149
- 4.6 Discussion and Suggestions for Further Research 153
- 5 SPH and its Application to Single Droplet Slurry Drying 155
- 5.1 Mathematical Derivation . 156
- 5.1.1 SPH Interpolation 156
- 5.1.2 Integral Approximations . 159
- 5.1.3 First Derivatives . 160
- 5.1.4 Laplace-Operator and Divergence of Diffusive Fluxes 162
- 5.1.5 General Second Derivatives. 165
- 5.1.6 Choice of Kernel, Smoothing Length and Cut-off Radius 165
- 5.1.7 Correction of the SPH Approximation 168
- 5.2 Implementation of Boundary Conditions . 169
- 5.2.1 Ghost Particles169
- 5.2.2 Insertion of Boundary Conditions into SPH Equations . 171
- 5.2.3 Repulsive Forces as Hard Sphere Boundaries172
- 5.3 Hydrodynamics of an Incompressible Liquid in SPH173
- 5.3.1 Continuity Equation, Density Evaluation 173
- 5.3.2 Momentum Balance . 175
- 5.3.3 Weakly Compressible SPH 178
- 5.4 Incompressible SPH 179
- 5.4.1 Boundary Conditions in ISPH182
- 5.4.2 Boundaries by the Ghost Technique, Wall Boundaries 182
- 5.4.3 Free Surface Boundaries in ISPH 183
- 5.4.4 Modifications to ISPH in This Work . 184
- 5.5 Surface Tension and Wetting . 189
- 5.5.1 The Interparticle Force Approach 190
- 5.5.2 The Concept of Surface-Lateral Particle Forces . 195
- 5.6 Representation of the Solid Phase 200
- 5.6.1 Primary Particles in the Slurry200
- 5.6.2 Calculation of Crust Formation . 202
- 5.7 Modelling of Drying Phenomena in SPH . 205
- 5.7.1 Heat Conduction . 205
- 5.7.2 Implementation of Linear Driving Force based Heat and
- Mass Transfer into SPH . 205
- 5.7.3 Extension to the Second Drying Period . 208
- 5.7.4 Treatment of Evaporation Concerning Particle Mass and
- Deletion 209
- 5.7.5 Modelling of Diffusion Driven Drying Involving the Gas
- Phase . 210
- 5.8 Time Integration 213
- 5.8.1 Stability Criteria in Explicit Time Stepping. 214
- 5.8.2 Time Stepping Criteria Employed in This Work and Their
- Reference Length . 216
- 5.8.3 Implicit Solution of Diffusive Equations . 218
- 5.8.4 Initialisation of an SPH Calculation . 220
- 6 Validation of the SPH Implementation 221
- 6.1 Implicit Solution of Heat Conduction. 221
- 6.2 Heat and Mass Transfer by Linear Driving Forces 224
- 6.2.1 Heat Transfer to a Unilaterally Heated Rod. 224
- 6.2.2 Coupled Heat and Mass Transfer: Droplet Evaporation . 226
- 6.3 Diffusion Driven Drying by SPH-Grid Coupling . 228
- 6.4 SPH Flow Solver . 230
- 6.4.1 ISPH Solution of a Standing Water Column. 230
- 6.4.2 Free Surface Flow 231
- 6.4.3 Surface Tension Approach of Pairwise Forces234
- 6.4.4 Wetting Phenomena . 237
- 7 Simulation of Structure Evolution During Drying 243
- 7.1 Simulation of the First Drying Period243
- 7.2 Simulation of Crust Formation 245
- 7.2.1 Simulation of the Second Drying Period without Crust
- Formation . 245
- 7.2.2 Crust Formation by Caught on First Touch. 247
- 7.2.3 Crust Formation Determined by the Water Content . 249
- 7.2.4 Effect of the Density Correction . 250
- 7.3 Influence of Adjustable Parameters on the Structure. 251
- 7.4 Effect of the Temperature . 256
- 7.5 Variation of the Resolution 259
- 7.6 Drying of a Microporous Structure 261
- 7.7 Comments on numerical efficiency 267
- 8 Conclusion 269
- A Numerical Regression by Gaussian Processes 273
- B FVM Implementation of the Droplet Polymerisation Model 277
- C Implementational Aspects of SPH 281
- C.1 Neighbourhood Search281
- C.1.1 Linked List 281
- C.1.2 Verlet List . 282
- C.2 Performance Aspects, Memory Alignment 282.