Title: Bin and Hopper Design
1Bin and Hopper Design
- Karl Jacob
- The Dow Chemical Company
- Solids Processing Lab
- jacobkv_at_dow.com
2The Four Big Questions
- What is the appropriate flow mode?
- What is the hopper angle?
- How large is the outlet for reliable flow?
- What type of discharger is required and what is
the discharge rate?
3Hopper Flow Modes
- Mass Flow - all the material in the hopper is in
motion, but not necessarily at the same velocity - Funnel Flow - centrally moving core, dead or
non-moving annular region - Expanded Flow - mass flow cone with funnel flow
above it
4Mass Flow
D
Does not imply plug flow with equal velocity
Typically need 0.75 D to 1D to enforce mass flow
Material in motion along the walls
5Funnel Flow
Active Flow Channel
Dead or non-flowing region
6Expanded Flow
Funnel Flow upper section
Mass Flow bottom section
7Problems with Hoppers
8Ratholing/Piping
Stable Annular Region
9Problems with Hoppers
- Ratholing/Piping
- Funnel Flow
10Funnel Flow
-Segregation -Inadequate Emptying -Structural
Issues
Coarse
Coarse
Fine
11Problems with Hoppers
- Ratholing/Piping
- Funnel Flow
- Arching/Doming
12Arching/Doming
Cohesive Arch preventing material from exiting
hopper
13Problems with Hoppers
- Ratholing/Piping
- Funnel Flow
- Arching/Doming
- Insufficient Flow
14Insufficient Flow
- Outlet size too small - Material not
sufficiently permeable to permit dilation in
conical section -gt plop-plop flow
Material under compression in the cylinder section
Material needs to dilate here
15Problems with Hoppers
- Ratholing/Piping
- Funnel Flow
- Arching/Doming
- Insufficient Flow
- Flushing
16Flushing
- Uncontrolled flow from a hopper due to powder
being in an aerated state - - occurs only in fine powders (rough rule of
thumb - Geldart group A and smaller) - - causes --gt improper use of aeration devices,
collapse of a rathole
17Problems with Hoppers
- Ratholing/Piping
- Funnel Flow
- Arching/Doming
- Insufficient Flow
- Flushing
- Inadequate Emptying
18Inadequate emptying
Usually occurs in funnel flow silos where the
cone angle is insufficient to allow self draining
of the bulk solid.
Remaining bulk solid
19Problems with Hoppers
- Ratholing/Piping
- Funnel Flow
- Arching/Doming
- Insufficient Flow
- Flushing
- Inadequate Emptying
- Mechanical Arching
20Mechanical Arching
- Akin to a traffic jam at the outlet of bin -
too many large particle competing for the small
outlet - 6 x dp,large is the minimum outlet size to
prevent mechanical arching, 8-12 x is preferred
21Problems with Hoppers
- Ratholing/Piping
- Funnel Flow
- Arching/Doming
- Insufficient Flow
- Flushing
- Inadequate Emptying
- Mechanical Arching
- Time Consolidation - Caking
22Time Consolidation - Caking
- Many powders will tend to cake as a function of
time, humidity, pressure, temperature - Particularly a problem for funnel flow silos
which are infrequently emptied completely
23Segregation
- Mechanisms
- - Momentum or velocity
- - Fluidization
- - Trajectory
- - Air current
- - Fines
24What the chances for mass flow?
- Cone Angle Cumulative of
- from horizontal hoppers with mass flow
- 45 0
- 60 25
- 70 50
- 75 70
- data from Ter Borg at Bayer
25Mass Flow (/-)
- flow is more consistent
- reduces effects of radial segregation
- stress field is more predictable
- full bin capacity is utilized
- first in/first out
- - wall wear is higher (esp. for abrasives)
- - higher stresses on walls
- - more height is required
26Funnel flow (/-)
- less height required
- - ratholing
- - a problem for segregating solids
- - first in/last out
- - time consolidation effects can be severe
- - silo collapse
- - flooding
- - reduction of effective storage capacity
27How is a hopper designed?
- Measure
- - powder cohesion/interparticle friction
- - wall friction
- - compressibility/permeability
- Calculate
- - outlet size
- - hopper angle for mass flow
- - discharge rates
28What about angle of repose?
Pile of bulk solids
?
?
?
29Angle of Repose
- Angle of repose is not an adequate indicator of
bin design parameters - In fact, it (the angle of repose) is only
useful in the determination of the contour of a
pile, and its popularity among engineers and
investigators is due not to its usefulness but to
the ease with which it is measured. - Andrew W.
Jenike - Do not use angle of repose to design the angle on
a hopper!
30Bulk Solids Testing
- Wall Friction Testing
- Powder Shear Testing - measures both powder
internal friction and cohesion - Compressibility
- Permeability
31Sources of Cohesion (Binding Mechanisms)
- Solids Bridges
- -Mineral bridges
- -Chemical reaction
- -Partial melting
- -Binder hardening
- -Crystallization
- -Sublimation
- Interlocking forces
- Attraction Forces
- -van der Waals
- -Electrostatics
- -Magnetic
- Interfacial forces
- -Liquid bridges
- -Capillary forces
32Testing Considerations
- Must consider the following variables
- - time
- - temperature
- - humidity
- - other process conditions
33Wall Friction Testing
Wall friction test is simply Physics 101 -
difference for bulk solids is that the friction
coefficient, ?, is not constant.
P 101
F ?N
34Wall Friction Testing
Jenike Shear Tester
35Wall Friction Testing Results
Wall Yield Locus (WYL), variable wall friction
Wall shear stress, ??
Wall Yield Locus, constant wall friction
?
Normal stress, ?
Powder Technologists usually express ? as the
angle of wall friction, ?
?? arctan ?
36Jenike Shear Tester
W x A
Bracket
Cover
Ring
S x A
Bulk Solid
Bulk Solid
Shear plane
37Other Shear Testers
- Peschl shear tester
- Biaxial shear tester
- Uniaxial compaction cell
- Annular (ring) shear testers
38Ring Shear Testers
Arm connected to load cells, S x A
Bulk solid
Bottom cell rotates slowly
W x A
39Shear test data analysis
?
C
fc
?1
?
40Stresses in Hoppers/Silos
- Cylindrical section - Janssen equation
- Conical section - radial stress field
- Stresses Pressures
41Stresses in a cylinder
Consider the equilibrium of forces on a
differential element, dh, in a straight-sided
silo Pv A vertical pressure acting from above ?
A g dh weight of material in element (Pv dPv)
A support of material from below ? ? D dh
support from solid friction on the wall
Pv A
h
? ? D dh
dh
(Pv dPv) A
? A g dh
D
(Pv dPv) A ? ? D dh Pv A ? A g dh
42Stresses in a cylinder (contd)
Two key substitutions ? ? Pw (friction
equation) Janssens key assumption Pw K Pv
This is not strictly true but is good enough from
an engineering view. Substituting and
rearranging, A dPv ? A g dh - ?? K Pv ? D
dh Substituting A (?/4) D2 and integrating
between h0, Pv 0 and hH and Pv Pv Pv (? g
D/ 4 ? K) (1 - exp(-4H ?K/D)) This is the Janssen
equation.
43Stresses in a cylinder (contd)
hydrostatic
Bulk solids
Notice that the asymptotic pressure depends only
on D, not on H, hence this is why silos are tall
and skinny, rather than short and squat.
44Stresses - Converging Section
Over 40 years ago, the pioneer in bulk solids
flow, Andrew W. Jenike, postulated that the
magnitude of the stress in the converging section
of a hopper was proportional to the distance of
the element from the hopper apex. ? ? ( r,
?) This is the radial stress field assumption.
?
r
45Silo Stresses - Overall
hydrostatic
Bulk solid
Notice that there is essentially no stress at the
outlet. This is good for discharge devices!
46Janssen Equation - Example
A large welded steel silo 12 ft in diameter and
60 feet high is to be built. The silo has a
central discharge on a flat bottom. Estimate the
pressure of the wall at the bottom of the silo if
the silo is filled with a) plastic pellets, and
b) water. The plastic pellets have the following
characteristics ? 35 lb/cu ft ? 20º The
Janssen equation is Pv (? g D/ 4 ? K) (1 -
exp(-4H ?K/D)) In this case D 12 ft ? tan ?
tan 20º 0.364 H 60 ft g 32.2 ft/sec2
? 35 lb/cu ft
47Janssen Equation - Example
K, the Janssen coefficient, is assumed to be 0.4.
It can vary according to the material but it is
not often measured. Substituting we get Pv
21,958 lbm/ft - sec2. If we divide by gc, we get
Pv 681.9 lbf/ft2 or 681.9 psf Remember that Pw
K Pv,, so Pw 272.8 psf. For water, P ? g H
and this results in P 3744 psf, a factor of 14
greater!
48Types of Bins
Conical
Pyramidal
Watch for in-flowing valleys in these bins!
49Types of Bins
Chisel
Wedge/Plane Flow
L
B
Lgt3B
50A thought experiment
51The Flow Function
52Determination of Outlet Size
?c,t
?c,i
Flow factor
53Determination of Outlet Size
B ?c,i H(?)/?
H(?) is a constant which is a function of hopper
angle
54H(?) Function
3
Circular
H(?)
2
Square
Rectangular outlets (L gt 3B)
1
60
20
50
10
30
40
Cone angle from vertical
55Example Calculation of a Hopper Geometry for
Mass Flow
An organic solid powder has a bulk density of 22
lb/cu ft. Jenike shear testing has determined
the following characteristics given below. The
hopper to be designed is conical. Wall friction
angle (against SS plate) ? 25º Bulk density
? 22 lb/cu ft Angle of internal friction ?
50º Flow function ?c 0.3 ?1 4.3
Using the design chart for conical hoppers, at ?
25º
?c 17º with 3º safety factor ff 1.27
56Example Calculation of a Hopper Geometry for
Mass Flow
ff ?/?a or ?a (1/ff) ? Condition for no
arching gt ?a gt ?c (1/ff) ? 0.3 ?1
4.3 (1/1.27) ? 0.3 ?1 4.3 ?1 8.82
?c 8.82/1.27 6.95 B 2.2 x 6.95/22 0.69
ft 8.33 in
57Material considerations for hopper design
- Amount of moisture in product?
- Is the material typical of what is expected?
- Is it sticky or tacky?
- Is there chemical reaction?
- Does the material sublime?
- Does heat affect the material?
58Material considerations for hopper design
- Is it a fine powder (lt 200 microns)?
- Is the material abrasive?
- Is the material elastic?
- Does the material deform under pressure?
59Process Questions
- How much is to be stored? For how long?
- Materials of construction
- Is batch integrity important?
- Is segregation important?
- What type of discharger will be used?
- How much room is there for the hopper?
60Discharge Rates
- Numerous methods to predict discharge rates from
silos or hopper - For coarse particles (gt500 microns)
- Beverloo equation - funnel flow
- Johanson equation - mass flow
- For fine particles - one must consider influence
of air upon discharge rate
61Beverloo equation
- W 0.58 ?b g0.5 (B - kdp)2.5
- where W is the discharge rate (kg/sec)
- ?b is the bulk density (kg/m3)
- g is the gravitational constant
- B is the outlet size (m)
- k is a constant (typically 1.4)
- dp is the particle size (m)
- Note Units must be SI
62Johanson Equation
- Equation is derived from fundamental principles -
not empirical - W ?b (?/4) B2 (gB/4 tan ?c)0.5
- where ?c is the angle of hopper from vertical
- This equation applies to circular outlets
- Units can be any dimensionally consistent set
- Note that both Beverloo and Johanson show that W
? B2.5!
63Discharge Rate - Example
- An engineer wants to know how fast a compartment
on a railcar will fill with polyethylene pellets
if the hopper is designed with a 6 Sch. 10
outlet. The car has 4 compartments and can carry
180000 lbs. The bulk solid is being discharged
from mass flow silo and has a 65 angle from
horizontal. Polyethylene has a bulk density of 35
lb/cu ft.
64Discharge Rate Example
- One compartment 180000/4 45000 lbs.
- Since silo is mass flow, use Johanson equation.
- 6 Sch. 10 pipe is 6.36 in diameter B
- W (35 lb/ft3)(?/4)(6.36/12)2 (32.2x(6.36/12)/4
tan 25)0.5 - W 23.35 lb/sec
- Time required is 45000/23.35 1926 secs or 32
min. - In practice, this is too long - 8 or 10 would
be a better choice.
65The Case of Limiting Flow Rates
- When bulk solids (even those with little
cohesion) are discharged from a hopper, the
solids must dilate in the conical section of the
hopper. This dilation forces air to flow from
the outlet against the flow of bulk solids and in
the case of fine materials either slows the flow
or impedes it altogether.
66Limiting Flow Rates
Interstitial gas pressure
Bulk density
Vertical stress
Note that gas pressure is less than ambient
pressure
67Limiting Flow Rates
- The rigorous calculation of limiting flow rates
requires simultaneous solution of gas pressure
and solids stresses subject to changing bulk
density and permeability. Fortunately, in many
cases the rate will be limited by some type of
discharge device such as a rotary valve or screw
feeder.
68Limiting Flow Rates - Carleton Equation
69Carleton Equation (contd)
- where
- v0 is the velocity of the bulk solid
- ? is the hopper half angle
- ?s is the absolute particle density
- ?f is the density of the gas
- ?f is the viscosity of the gas
70Silo Discharging Devices
- Slide valve/Slide gate
- Rotary valve
- Vibrating Bin Bottoms
- Vibrating Grates
- others
71Rotary Valves
Quite commonly used to discharge materials from
bins.
72Screw Feeders
Dead Region
Better Solution
73Discharge Aids
- Air cannons
- Pneumatic Hammers
- Vibrators
- These devices should not be used in place of a
properly designed hopper!
They can be used to break up the effects of time
consolidation.