Scientific Reports (Jun 2017)

Liquid-liquid extraction intensification by micro-droplet rotation in a hydrocyclone

  • Yuan Huang,
  • Hua-lin Wang,
  • Yu-quan Chen,
  • Yan-hong Zhang,
  • Qiang Yang,
  • Zhi-shan Bai,
  • Liang Ma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02732-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract The previous literature reports that using a hydrocyclone as an extractor intensifies the mass transfer and largely reduces the consumption of extractant from 1800–2000 kg h−1 to 30–90 kg h−1. However, the intensification mechanism has not been clear. This paper presents experimental and numerical methods to study the multi-scale motion of particles in hydrocyclones. In addition to the usually considered translational behavior, the high-speed rotation of dispersed micro-spheres caused by the anisotropic swirling shear flow is determined. The rotation speeds of the tested micro-spheres are above 1000 rad s−1, which are much larger than the instantaneous rotation speed in isotropic turbulence. Due to the conical structure of a hydrocyclone, the rotation speed maintains stability along the axial direction. Numerical results show that the particle Reynolds number of micro-droplets in a hydrocyclone is equal to that in conventional extractors, but the particles have high rotation speeds of up to 10,000 rad s−1 and long mixing lengths of more than 1000 mm. Both the rotation of micro-droplets along the spiral trajectories and the intense eddy diffusion in a hydrocyclone contribute to the extraction intensification.