Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, Vol.37, No.2, 439-448, 1998
Calcium carbonate scaling kinetics determined from radiotracer experiments with calcium-47
The deposition rate of calcium carbonate on a heat-transfer surface has been measured using a calcium-47 radiotracer and compared to the measured rate of thermal fouling. The crystalline phase of calcium carbonate that precipitates depends on the degree of supersaturation at the heat-transfer surface, with aragonite precipitating at higher supersaturations and calcite precipitating at lower supersaturations. Whereas the mass deposition rates were constant with time, the thermal fouling rates decreased throughout the course of each experiment as a result of densification of the deposit. It is proposed that the densification was driven by the temperature gradient across the deposit together with the retrograde solubility of calcium carbonate. The temperature dependence of the deposition rate yielded an activation energy of 79 +/- 4 kJ/mol for the precipitation of calcium carbonate on a heat-transfer surface.
Keywords:CRYSTALLIZATION