1st World Congress on Industrial Process Tomography
Tomographic Measurements of Micro- and Macromixing Using the Dual Wavelength Photometry
Mathias Buchmann1, Dieter Mewes2
Institut für Verfahrenstechnik, Universität Hannover, Callinstrasse 36,
D-30167 Hannover, Germany, e-mail: 1buch@c36.uni-hannover.de, 2dms@c36.uni-hannover.de
Abstract - The newly developed tomographical dual wavelength photometry enables the measurement of the local intensity of segregation at a multitude of points inside the stirred vessel. This is done by injecting a mixture of an inert and a reacting dye into the vessel. The inert dye serves as a tracer for the macromixing, whereas the vanishing of the reacting dye shows the micromixing. The concentration fields of the dyes are measured simultaneously by transluminating the vessel from three directions with superimposed laser beams of different wavelength. The light absorption by the dyes is measured with CCD-cameras and these projections are used for the tomographic reconstruction of the concentration fields. Low Reynolds number measurements were performed with a combination of two Rushton turbines and a combination of two Pitched Blade Impellers. The combination of the Pitched Blade Impellers yields a good axial transport but a slow micromixing. The injection in the middle between the combination of the two Rushton turbines yields a faster micromixing, but the macrotransport is limited to the region between the stirrers..
Keywords: micro- and macromixing, laminar mixing, optical tomography
Sign-in to access the full text
Copyright © International Society for Industrial Process Tomography, 1999. All rights reserved.