Author:
GILBERTSON M. A.,EAMES I.
Abstract
The formation of segregation patterns in initially homogeneous, fluidized, binary
mixtures of particles has been studied. The adjustment of the bed depends on the
proportions of fine and coarse particles in the mixture and the gas flow rate relative to
the minimum fluidization velocities of the two components. The particles are immobile
until the gas flow rate is sufficiently large to fluidize the mixture of particles. When the
gas flow rate exceeds this critical value, alternating vertical bands of coarse and fine
particles form. At a second critical gas velocity this pattern breaks down and the more
familiar pattern of a mixed horizontal band on top of a layer of coarse particles forms.
A phase diagram, constructed from experimental observations, shows the conditions
for which each of these regimes exists. Its structure is explained in terms of the
fluidization and consequent mobility of the mixture components. When horizontal
bands are present, the thickness of the lower layer of coarse particles decreases with
increasing gas flow rate depending on the proportion of fine particles in the bed.
This, and its development, can be understood by analogy with the sedimentation
of particles through a turbulent fluid. The experiments imply that the efficiency of
mixing by the bubbles in the fluidized bed is very much less than that expected from
gas bubbles in a liquid.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
51 articles.
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