Chemical Forums
Specialty Chemistry Forums => Chemical Engineering Forum => Topic started by: curiouscat on March 19, 2015, 02:00:24 PM
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Say you are pumping a slurry. Say, salt crystals in water. Perhaps 10% of the slurry is solids.
Now choking / plugging is always something you want to avoid. My naive intuition says use a large pipe size to avoid choking.
OTOH, for a certain flowrate a smaller pipe means a larger velocity. So that would be less likely to plug up.
What's the right way to think about this?
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Perhaps a turbulent flow is the way to go here, keep the stuff in suspension. So higher velocity and perhaps a nitrogen blast to maintain turbulence?
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Bulk flow is more of a chemical engineering question, we'll see how our experts weigh in. My knee jerk reaction is that you'll want a wider pipe. Flow is essentially zero at the inner surface for liquids, I have to guess the same or worse for a slurry. So you want a wider tube so there is flow. Unless the slurry is a non-Newtonian fluid. But in that case, I have no idea at all. ;D
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Bulk flow is more of a chemical engineering question, we'll see how our experts weigh in. My knee jerk reaction is that you'll want a wider pipe. Flow is essentially zero at the inner surface for liquids, I have to guess the same or worse for a slurry. So you want a wider tube so there is flow. Unless the slurry is a non-Newtonian fluid. But in that case, I have no idea at all. ;D
It shouldn't be non Newtonian. What I worry most is solids settling out. It is a settling slurry. Make a pipe too large and essentially you have a settling problem.
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Knowing virtually nothing at all about this subject, I can still add that this might be a situation where there is be a tradeoff between the two factors and the optimum situation is somewhere in the middle.
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I know a company that pumps ~1m3 per minute of a 65% solids slurry through an 11inch underground pipe for an uninterrupted 56miles. The replacement cost from the last time they blocked it 10-15years ago was over £1M per mile.
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I know a company that pumps ~1m3 per minute of a 65% solids slurry through an 11inch underground pipe for an uninterrupted 56miles. The replacement cost from the last time they blocked it 10-15years ago was over £1M per mile.
Thank my stars that my slurry is 5 to 10% my distance is a 100 ft or so. :)
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I thought you had to transport it further!
Only 100 feet! You should not have a problem. Make sure its all downhill.