Fluid bed
processing involves drying, cooling, agglomeration, granulation, and coating of
particulate materials. Uniform processing conditions are achieved by passing a gas
(usually air) through a product layer under controlled velocity conditions to create
a fluidized state. In fluid bed drying, the fluidization gas supplies heat, but
the gas flow need not be the only source. Fluid bed drying offers important
advantages over other methods for drying of particulate materials. Particle
fluidization gives easy material transport, high rates of drying at high
thermal efficiency while preventing overheating of individual particles. Fluid
bed drying is suitable for powders, granules,agglomerates and pellets with
average particle size normally between 50 and 5,000 microns. Very fine, light
powders or highly elongated particles may require vibration for successful
fluid bed drying.
Fluid bed drying is
an efficient method of drying milk for production of instant milk powder. The
fluid bed is connected to the bottom of the drying chamber and consists of a
casing with a perforated bottom. The casing is spring mounted and can be vibrated
by a motor. The powder from the drying chamber is admitted to the first section
of the fluid-bed dryer where it is humidified by steam. The vibrator conveys the
powder through the drying sections, where air at a gradually decreasing temperature
is admitted through the powder bed. Agglomeration takes place in the first
stage of drying when the particles adhere to each other. Subsequently water is evaporated from the
agglomerates during their passage through the drying sections.In fluid bed for
cooling, cold gas (usually ambient or conditioned air) is used. Conditioning of
the gas may be required to achieve sufficient product cooling in an economically
sized plant and to prevent pick up of volatiles (usually moisture). Heat may
also be removed by cooling surfaces immersed in the fluidized layer.Agglomeration
and granulation may be performed in a number of ways depending upon the feed to
be processed and the product properties to be achieved. Fluid bed coating of
powders involves the spraying of a liquid on to the fluidized layer under
strictly controlled conditions.
There are two basic
types of fluid bed designs according to the solids flow pattern in the dryer.
- The back-mix flow design for feeds that require a degree of drying before fluidization is established.
- The plug flow design for feeds, those are directly fluidizable on entering the fluid bed
ii)
Plug flow fluid beds: These are applied for feeds that are
directly fluidizable. Plug flow of solids is obtained by designing the fluid
bed with baffles to limit solids mixing in the horizontal direction. The
volatile content and temperature vary uniformly as solids pass through the bed,
and the plug flow enables the solids to come close to equilibrium with the
incoming gas.In plug-flow
fluidized bed dryers, the bed usually has a length-to-width ratio in the range
of 5:1 to 30:1; the solids flow continuously as a plug through the channel from
the inlet to the exit. This ensures approximately equal residence time for all
particles, regardless of their size. The main operational problems occur at the
feed end where wet feedstock must be fluidized directly rather than mixed with
drier material as in a well-mixed unit.
iii)
Vibrating fluid bed dryer: Vibrating fluid bed dryer is basically
of the plug flow type. It is especially applied for drying and cooling products
that fluidize poorly due to a broad particle size distribution, highly
irregular particle shape, or require relatively low fluidization velocities to
prevent attrition. The vibro-fluidizer operates with a shallow powder layer of
less than 200 mm. This gives a much lower product residence time per unit bed
area than non-vibrating beds, which can have powder layers up to 1500 mm.
iv)
Contact fluidizers: This is a rectangular fluid bed dryer incorporating back-mix and
mix flow sections. A rotary distributor disperses the wet feed evenly over the
back-mix section equipped with contact heating surfaces immersed in the
fluidized layer. The heating surfaces provide a significant portion of the
required energy, and therefore, it is possible to reduce both the temperature
and the flow of gas through the system. This is particularly important for heat
sensitive products. Subsequent plug flow sections are used for post drying and
cooling, if required.
v)
Batch fluidized bed dryer: Batch fluidized bed dryers are used
for low throughput (normally <50 kg/h and for 100 kg/h) and multi-product applications.
Drying air is heated directly or indirectly usually to a fixed temperature. The
drying air flow rate is also usually fixed. However, it is possible to start
drying at a higher inlet gas temperature and flow rate and lower it since the
product moisture content falls below the critical value.Mechanical agitators or
vibration may be needed if the material is difficult to fluidize.
Multi stage fluidized bed dryers |
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