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Slurry flow is a common means of transporting solid particles in the mining and mineral processing industry. Depending on the slurry mixture, the flow can be very erosive and, at times, maintaining the piping system can be quite challenging. On the other hand, due to the complexity of flow characteristics, it is very difficult to accurately predict slurry flow performance and its erosion rate by only using manual calculation or imperial methods.
This paper presents a methodology to simulate the slurry flow in a feed box that is designed to reduce the maintenance associated with the slurry flow, based on a 3D CFD model using ANSYS CFX. In this configuration, the slurry enters the feed box through the inlet pipe, it then fills the first depositing area and, when full, will overflow to the second depositing area before exiting through the outlet pipe (see Figure 1).
The main focus of the simulation is to predict the wall surface where the slurry flow will impact and cause material erosion. Then, lining pads are installed at those specific locations to prevent the feed box from material loss, which reduces maintenance costs and downtime.
Figure 1: General geometry
Figure 2: Model mesh
This model is a three-phase Eulerian-Eulerian model with solid particles, water and air defined individually with different velocity fields:
The variable slurry mixture viscosity is defined as follows:
This model uses a velocity inlet (gravity fed) and pressure out combination for boundary conditions for smoother convergence.
For general model validation methodology, please refer to article “Optimizing the Design of Penstock Manifolds with 3D Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Simulation”[2]
In addition, some specific sensitivity cases are created for this application:
Figure 7: Sensitivity case comparison (80% solid volume (left) vs. 60% solid volume (right))
Figure 8 shows the feed box condition after 3-month’s operation. From the initial observation, the erosion condition seems to align very well with the model prediction. A detailed inspection can be performed at a later date (maybe after a year of operation) to obtain more information to validate model outputs.
Figure 8: Mineral deposing area
The above reveals a CFD modelling technique that simulates the slurry flow. This methodology can provide reliable and detailed information regarding flow characteristics and performance. It can be of great help for engineers when working on an innovative design for a complex problem.
References:
[1] Mueller, S., et al, “The Rheology of Suspensions of Solid Particles”, Proc. R. Soc. A, 466, pp.1201-1228, 2010
[2]. Eric Chen, “Optimizing the Design of Penstock Manifolds with 3D Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Simulation”, BBA Publication, BBA, 2019
This blog article originally appeard on BBA.ca and was written by Kerem Karakok, P.Eng., Ph.D. in colaboration with Eric Chen
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