The chemical industry uses large
quantities of packing materials. To protect the millimeter-scale
particles against abrasion, Fraunhofer IKTS encapsulates them in a layer
of metal that boosts their thermal conductivity by a factor of five.
Credit: © Fraunhofer IKTS
The chemical industry consumes millions
of tons of packing materials as catalytic support media or adsorbents
in fixed-bed reactors and heat storage systems. Fraunhofer researchers
have developed a means of encapsulating these filler particles in metal
that multiplies their thermal conductivity by five.
Random packing materials are used in many chemical reactors and heat
storage systems as catalytic support media or adsorbents. Several
million tons of these functional materials are consumed every year in
industrial processes to produce chemical feedstock. To ensure that these
processes produce the desired results, the packing materials have to be
able to conduct heat efficiently. This is not always easy, because the
gaps between the millimeter-scale particles prevent heat from being
conducted optimally throughout the packed bed. Chemical companies
therefore have to build special heatconducting structures into their
reactors. "This is time-consuming and expensive," says Jörg Adler, a
researcher at the Fraunhofer Institute for Ceramic Technologies and
Systems IKTS in Dresden. Together with colleagues at the Fraunhofer
Institutes for Machine Tools and Forming Technology IWU in Chemnitz and
for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology IGB in Stuttgart, Adler
has developed a concept that increases the heat transfer capacity of the
packing material fivefold. Their concept involves encapsulating
cylindrical filler particles in metal. The points of contact between the
metal-encapsulated particles form a metal framework that enables heat
to be conducted throughout the packed bed faster and more efficiently.
Five times more efficient
The scientists have conducted tests in the laboratory that prove that
this efficiency gain is realizable, using a heat storage system
consisting of an eight-liter packed bed of aluminum-encapsulated zeolite
pellets. Adler lists the advantages: "The packed bed is heated to an
even temperature more rapidly. It takes significantly less time to load
and unload the heat storage medium. This makes it possible to enhance
the efficiency of chemical reactions and hence increase product
quality." The researchers expect that it will be possible to obtain even
better results using a metal with a higher thermal conductivity, such
as copper. The particles of packing material used in the laboratory
tests are five millimeters long and encapsulated in a layer of aluminum
with a thickness of 0.25 millimeters. The scientists produce them using a
specially developed process that could be easily adapted to mass
production. The packing material is poured into long, thin metal tubes,
compacted to prevent it from spilling out, and the tubes are then cut
into sections to form cylindrical particles no more than a few
millimeters in length.
"The chemical industry uses large quantities of packing materials
which, ideally, are expected to remain in the reactors for many years.
One of the problems is that they are subject to powder abrasion during
shipping and when in use, caused by particles rubbing against one
another. This no longer happens when they are encapsulated in metal, and
so the packing material lasts longer," says Adler.
Applying heat to zeolite pellets that are saturated with water causes
the pellets to dry and absorb heat. When the pellets are rehydrated,
the absorbed heat is released. This physical effect makes them suitable
for use in heat storage systems. In this application too, says Adler,
"the efficiency of the process depends on the thermal conductivity of
the zeolite material. It is often necessary to install very complicated
heat-exchanger units, which are expensive and reduce the volume
available for actual heat storage. The metal-encapsulated packing
material could be a valuable improvement here. In the laboratory, we
have been able to significantly shorten the heat storage cycle time."
Now that the researchers have demonstrated the feasibility and
functionality of the encapsulation technique in the lab, they want to
move on to the next step on the way to industrial application. "We need
to further optimize the material and the manufacturing process, and
gather data so as to determine exactly to what extent the advantages of
higher thermal conductivity outweigh the additional costs of metal
encapsulation," says Adler.
The chemical industry uses large quantities of packing materials as
catalytic support media and adsorbents. A catalyst is a substance that
accelerates a chemical reaction without undergoing any chemical change
itself. An adsorbent removes and stores specific products of a chemical
reaction. As well as being used to optimize chemical reactions, packing
materials also play a role in modern heat storage systems. In a packed
bed reactor, a gas or liquid flows through the material and triggers a
chemical reaction on the surface of the tiny particles.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
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