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Flow Dynamics in Eccentrically Rotating Flasks Used for Dispersant Effectiveness Testing
Authors:Vikram J. Kaku  Michel C. Boufadel  Albert D. Venosa  James Weaver
Affiliation:(1) Department of Mechanical Engineering, Temple University, 1947 N. 12th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA;(2) Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Temple University, 1947 N. 12th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA;(3) Oil Spill Research Program, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA;(4) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, 960 College Station Road, Athens, GA 30605, USA
Abstract:The evaluation of dispersant effectiveness used for oil spills is commonly done using tests conducted in laboratory flasks. We used a Hot Wire Anemometer (HWA) to characterize mixing dynamics in the Swirling Flask (SF) and the Baffled Flask (BF), the latter is being considered by the EPA to replace the prior to test dispersant effectiveness in the laboratory. Five rotation speeds of the orbital shaker carrying the flasks were considered, Ω = 50, 100, 150, 175 and 200 rpm. The radial and azimuthal water speeds were measured for each Ω. It was found that the flow in the SF is, in general, two-dimensional changing from horizontal at low Ω to axi-symmetric at high Ω. The flow in the BF appeared to be three-dimensional at all rotation speeds. This indicates that the BF is more suitable for representing the (inherently) 3-D flow at sea. In the SF, the speeds and energy dissipation rates ɛ increased gradually as the rotation speed increased. Those in the BF increased sharply at rotation speeds greater than 150 rpm. At 200 rpm, the Kolmogorov scale (i.e., size of smallest eddies) was about 250 and 50 μm in the SF and BF, respectively. Noting that the observed droplet sizes of dispersed oils range from 50 to 400 μm (hence most of it is less than 250 μm), one concludes that the mixing in the SF (even at 200 rpm) is not representative of the vigorous mixing occurring at sea.
Keywords:anemometers  data acquisition  eccentric  energy dissipation  oil spills  rotating flasks  time series analysis  turbulence  velocity gradient
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