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Cited 5 time in webofscience Cited 5 time in scopus
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Novel static mixers based on triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) architectures

Authors
Ouda, MariamAl-Ketan, OraibSreedhar, NurshaunAli, Mohamed I. HasanAbu Al-Rub, Rashid K.Hong, SeungkwanArafat, Hassan A.
Issue Date
10월-2020
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Keywords
Triply periodic minimal surfaces; Water treatment; Static mixers; Computational fluid dynamics; Process intensification; Kenics mixer
Citation
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, v.8, no.5
Indexed
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
Volume
8
Number
5
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/52573
DOI
10.1016/j.jece.2020.104289
ISSN
2213-3437
Abstract
Static mixers are frequently used in water treatment applications, for example as inline coagulators. A desired geometry of a static mixer is one that results in low mixing energy and high mixing efficiency. Triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS) are architectures which are described mathematically such that the mean curvature is zero at any point on their surface. In this work, novel static mixers based on TPMS architectures were modeled as mixers of aqueous feeds, using several computational fluid dynamics (CFD) tools and compared to the state of the art Kenics mixer. The CFD models were verified experimentally. Four TPMS geometries were studied: Gyroid, Diamond, IWP, and Primitive. The dimensionless power number (K-p) was used as a metric to compare the energy requirement of the mixers, while the coefficient of variance (COV) was used to quantify their mixing efficiency. In single element mixers, three TPMS geometries; Gyroid, Diamond and IWP, outperformed the Kenics in terms of mixing energy, with a comparable or better mixing efficiency. In multiple element mixers, however, the Kenics outperformed the TPMS mixers in term of mixing efficiency, while the latter's energy performance remained superior. Subsequent design modifications of the multi-element TPMS mixers were conducted, including the hybridization of TPMS and Kenics architectures. The changes resulted in mixing efficiencies comparable to the Kenics, but with at least 25 % decrease in energy requirements. The complex, inter-connected and perfectly curved structures of the TPMS shapes are behind their high mixing and energy performance.
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Hong, Seung kwan
공과대학 (건축사회환경공학부)
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