Archimedes number
In viscous fluid dynamics, the Archimedes number, is a dimensionless number used to determine the motion of fluids due to density differences, named after the ancient Greek scientist and mathematician Archimedes.
It is the ratio of gravitational forces to viscous forces and has the form:
where:
- is the local external field,,
- is the characteristic length of body,.
- is the submerged specific gravity,
- is the density of the fluid,,
- is the density of the body,,
- is the kinematic viscosity,,
- is the dynamic viscosity,,
Uses
The Archimedes number is generally used in design of tubular chemical process reactors. The following are non-exhaustive examples of using the Archimedes number in reactor design.Packed-bed fluidization design
The Archimedes number is applied often in the engineering of packed beds, which are very common in the chemical processing industry. A packed bed reactor, which is similar to the ideal reactor model">Chemical reactor">reactor model, involves packing a tubular reactor with a solid catalyst, then passing incompressible or compressible fluids through the solid bed. When the solid particles are small, they may be "fluidized", so that they act as if they were a fluid. When fluidizing a packed bed, the pressure of the working fluid is increased until the pressure drop between the bottom of the bed and the top of the bed is equal to the weight of the packed solids. At this point, the velocity of the fluid is just not enough to achieve fluidization, and extra pressure is required to overcome the friction of particles with each other and the wall of the reactor, allowing fluidization to occur. This gives a minimum fluidization velocity,, that may be estimated by:where:
- is the diameter of sphere with the same volume as the solid particle and can often be estimated as, where is the diameter of the particle.
Bubble column design
Another use is in the estimation of gas holdup in a bubble column. In a bubble column, the gas holdup can be estimated by:where:
- is the gas holdup fraction
- is the Eötvos number
- is the Froude number
- is the diameter of holes in the column's spargers
- is the column diameter
- Parameters to are found empirically