화학공학소재연구정보센터
Computers & Chemical Engineering, Vol.71, 331-346, 2014
Moving boundary models for the growth of crystalline deposits from undetected leakages of industrial process liquors
In this study, a computational model which simulates the growth of crystalline deposits from dripping salt solution is developed and validated. This problem is of interest to the nuclear industry where the morphology of deposited material impacts on its associated criticality risk. An existing model for simulating geological-stalagmite formations is adapted to the case of dripping salt-solutions which form thin films of fluid that precipitate out over time, forming accumulations. The implementation of a CFD Volume-ofFluid multiphase model is developed such that the fluid-flow is coupled to the crystallisation kinetics and a moving-boundary model is used for describing the size and shape of growing crystalline deposits. The fluid-flow and forming accumulation are fully coupled, with the model able to account for solute diffusion and solvent evaporation. Results are in good agreement with experimental data for surrogate salt-solutions. Numerical results are presented to assess the sensitivity to process and environmental parameters. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license.