Direct Numerical Simulation for Flooding Behavior in Counter-current Gas/Liquid Flow Systems for Carbon Capture
ORAL
Abstract
Understanding incipient flooding is crucial for industrial systems that involve liquid-gas counter current flow. A biocatalytic textile-based gas-liquid contactor is one application that utilizes immobilized enzymes to accelerate CO2 capture. A spiral-wound design of such structured packing is assembled by folding cheesecloth fabric over the long edge of a rectangular mesh reinforcement and rolling up the sandwich as a tube. Counter-current flow takes place between an aqueous K2CO3 solution and an N2 and CO2 gas mixture. Evaluating gas/liquid interactions using two-phase flow capabilities is a challenging problem. Owing to the complex geometry and flow, an investigation of interfacial waves is necessary to understand the local mechanisms initiating the transition to flooding. Identifying counter-current flow limitations (CCFL) are important as these inhibit the interaction of carbon-dioxide with biocatalytic surfaces. Direct numerical simulation (DNS) approach with PHASTA code is utilized to establish predictive metrics for identifying CCFL proposed in the biocatalytic reactor design. Strong influence of instantaneous flow parameters requires local mesh refinement for the resolution of interfaces. Simulations that evaluate the two-phase flow can lead to developing models that predict two-phase flow behavior from global parameters to benefit improved contactor design for efficient CO2 capture.
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Presenters
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Sultan Abdul Wasay
North Carolina State University
Authors
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Sultan Abdul Wasay
North Carolina State University
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Jialong Shen
North Carolina State University
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Sonja Salmon
North Carolina State University
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Igor A. Bolotnov
North Carolina State University