TY - JOUR
T1 - Bubble sizes in agitated solvent/reactant mixtures used in heterogeneous catalytic hydrogenation of 2-butyne-1,4-diol
AU - Hu, Binjie
AU - Nienow, Alvin W.
AU - Hugh Stitt, E.
AU - Pacek, Andrzej W.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work forms part of the project “Advanced Technology in Catalytic Chemistry and Engineering for Novel Applications (ATHENA)”, sponsored by EPSRC and Johnson Matthey Catalysts. The authors would like to acknowledge very helpful discussions with members of the ATHENA project.
PY - 2006/10
Y1 - 2006/10
N2 - Catalytic hydrogenations reactions are frequently conducted in "dead-end" multiphase stirred reactors with the reactant dissolved either in an alcohol, or in water or a mixture of the two. In such systems, the rate of gas-liquid mass transfer, which depends on bubble size, may well be the overall rate-limiting step. However, a study of bubble sizes across the whole range of solvent compositions from entirely water to entirely organic has not been reported. Here, for the first time, a systematic investigation has been made in a 3 L, closed vessel simulating a "dead-end" reactor containing 1% by volume of air which is dispersed by a Rushton turbine in water, isopropanol (IPA) and mixtures of the two, with and without 2-butyne-1,4-diol simulating a reactant. Mean specific energy dissipation rates, over(ε{lunate}, -)T, up to 50 W kg- 1 have been used and bubbles size distributions and mean size were measured using a video-microscope-computer technique. In the single component solvents (water, σ ∼ 72 mN m- 1; IPA, σ ∼ 21 mN m- 1) though the interfacial tensions are very different, irregular, relatively large bubbles of similar sizes were observed (d32 ∼ 300 μ m in IPA, and d32 ∼ 400 μ m in water) with a wide size distribution. In the mixed aqueous/organic solvents, and especially at the lower concentrations of IPA (1%, 5%, 10%), the bubbles were spherical, much smaller (d32 from 50 to 70 μ m) with a narrow size distribution. The addition of the reactant (0.2 M 2-butyne-1,4-diol) to the mixed solvents had little effect on the mean size, shape or distribution. However, addition to water (thus producing a mixed aqueous/organic liquid phase) led to small (d32 ∼ 50 μ m) spherical bubbles of narrow size distribution. Neither Weber number nor surface tension was suitable for correlating bubble sizes since σ decreased steadily from pure water to IPA whilst bubble size passed through a minimum at around 5% IPA. For any particular fluid composition, the functionality between d32 and over(ε{lunate}, -)T was similar, i.e. d32 ∝ (over(ε{lunate}, -)T)- 0.25. The above observations are explained in terms of the polarisation of bubble surfaces in miscible mixed aqueous/organic liquids caused by preferential directional adsorption at low concentrations of the organic component with its hydrophilic part directed into the aqueous phase and its hydrophobic part into the gas phase. As a result, coalescence is heavily suppressed in the low-concentration miscible alcohol (or diol)/aqueous systems whilst strong coalescence dominates bubble sizes in water and the alcohol and at high concentrations of the latter.
AB - Catalytic hydrogenations reactions are frequently conducted in "dead-end" multiphase stirred reactors with the reactant dissolved either in an alcohol, or in water or a mixture of the two. In such systems, the rate of gas-liquid mass transfer, which depends on bubble size, may well be the overall rate-limiting step. However, a study of bubble sizes across the whole range of solvent compositions from entirely water to entirely organic has not been reported. Here, for the first time, a systematic investigation has been made in a 3 L, closed vessel simulating a "dead-end" reactor containing 1% by volume of air which is dispersed by a Rushton turbine in water, isopropanol (IPA) and mixtures of the two, with and without 2-butyne-1,4-diol simulating a reactant. Mean specific energy dissipation rates, over(ε{lunate}, -)T, up to 50 W kg- 1 have been used and bubbles size distributions and mean size were measured using a video-microscope-computer technique. In the single component solvents (water, σ ∼ 72 mN m- 1; IPA, σ ∼ 21 mN m- 1) though the interfacial tensions are very different, irregular, relatively large bubbles of similar sizes were observed (d32 ∼ 300 μ m in IPA, and d32 ∼ 400 μ m in water) with a wide size distribution. In the mixed aqueous/organic solvents, and especially at the lower concentrations of IPA (1%, 5%, 10%), the bubbles were spherical, much smaller (d32 from 50 to 70 μ m) with a narrow size distribution. The addition of the reactant (0.2 M 2-butyne-1,4-diol) to the mixed solvents had little effect on the mean size, shape or distribution. However, addition to water (thus producing a mixed aqueous/organic liquid phase) led to small (d32 ∼ 50 μ m) spherical bubbles of narrow size distribution. Neither Weber number nor surface tension was suitable for correlating bubble sizes since σ decreased steadily from pure water to IPA whilst bubble size passed through a minimum at around 5% IPA. For any particular fluid composition, the functionality between d32 and over(ε{lunate}, -)T was similar, i.e. d32 ∝ (over(ε{lunate}, -)T)- 0.25. The above observations are explained in terms of the polarisation of bubble surfaces in miscible mixed aqueous/organic liquids caused by preferential directional adsorption at low concentrations of the organic component with its hydrophilic part directed into the aqueous phase and its hydrophobic part into the gas phase. As a result, coalescence is heavily suppressed in the low-concentration miscible alcohol (or diol)/aqueous systems whilst strong coalescence dominates bubble sizes in water and the alcohol and at high concentrations of the latter.
KW - Aqueous/organic solvents
KW - Batch stirred reactors
KW - Breakage/coalescence
KW - Bubbles
KW - Surface polarisation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33748149080&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ces.2006.07.004
DO - 10.1016/j.ces.2006.07.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33748149080
SN - 0009-2509
VL - 61
SP - 6765
EP - 6774
JO - Chemical Engineering Science
JF - Chemical Engineering Science
IS - 20
ER -