(79f) Towards Rational Design of Curved Microreactors for Enhanced Mixing and Narrower Residence Time Distribution | AIChE

(79f) Towards Rational Design of Curved Microreactors for Enhanced Mixing and Narrower Residence Time Distribution

Authors 

Gao, Y. - Presenter, The University of Cambridge
Torrente-Murciano, L., University of Cambridge
Micro-reactors are widely applied in organic synthesis, nanoparticle synthesis, biochemsitry and photocatalysis due to their high mass and heat transfer rate as a result of small channel diameter. However, their characteristic laminar flow implies that mixing in the radial dimension is only facilitated by diffusion, leading to concentration and temperature profiles as well as wide residence time distributions. Moreover, fast mixing is of key importance in many applications, e.g. the measurement of fast kinetics and enhanced selectivity. The group recently demonstrated the use of curved reactors to promote the formation of Dean vortices and the effect of the design parameters (i.e. helical diameter, pitch) on narrowing the residence time distribution. Such effect was translated into narrow size distributions during the use of helical reactor for nanoparticle synthesis (1).

Further work reveals that mixing in the cross-section of the channel can be further enhanced by manipulating the direction of the curvature. Three different curved reactors shown in Figure 1 have been systematically analysed using computational fluid dynamic simulations (CFD). Backward particle tracking is adopted to simulate convection and the posterior Lagrangian transport model is solved to determine diffusion in order to reduce the effect of numerical diffusion (false diffusion), which arises from truncation errors associated to representing the fluid flow equations in discrete form (2). Mixing index (MI) and mixing potential (MP), the specific contact area between two streams(3), are used to quantify mixing.

After the same distance, the planar serpentine reactor shows the worst mixing potential due to the offset effect caused by opposite direction of the Dean vortices after two successive half circles. On the other hand, the alternating-axis reactor presents a higher level of mixing and narrower diffusion-free residence time distribution than the standard helical reactor when the Reynlds number is higher than 40.

References:

  1. Wu KJ, Bohan GM, Torrente-Murciano L. Synthesis of narrow sized silver nanoparticles in the absence of capping ligands in helical microreactors. Reaction Chemistry & Engineering. 2017;2(2):116-28.
  2. Matsunaga T, Lee HJ, Nishino K. An approach for accurate simulation of liquid mixing in a T-shaped micromixer. Lab on a Chip. 2013;13(8):1515-21.
  3. Bothe D, Stemich C, Warnecke HJ. Fluid mixing in a T-shaped micro-mixer. Chemical Engineering Science. 2006;61(9):2950-8.