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Drying Technology
An International Journal
Volume 23, 2005 - Issue 5
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Original Articles

Comparison of Moving Bed Dryers of Solids Operating in Parallel and Counterflow Modes

Pages 1003-1025 | Published online: 06 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

The drying rates in moving bed dryers are compared. The gas and the solids to be dried are in parallel flow or counterflow. A new simplified method to simulate the drying in parallel and counterflow moving beds is developed. This model is based on the solution of arbitrary experimental or theoretical drying rate Equations of single solid particles (or thin-layer drying rate equation) coupled with heat and mass conservation Equations of the dryer. The solution is presented in an integral form of the drying equation showing the relation between time or location in the dryer and degree of drying. The method allows rapid calculation of the moisture, vapor mass fraction, and temperature distributions along the dryer in drying with moist air or steam. The model is demonstrated by using a result based on the receding front evaporation model as the specific thin-layer drying equation in the moving bed model. Wood chips are chosen as an example of the substance to be dried, but the method applies also for other medium, if the dependence of the drying rate on moisture and ambient temperature and humidity (thin layer drying rate) is known. The size of the dryer needed to reach the same degree of drying operating in the parallel mode is much greater than that of counterflow type, when the drying medium is air or flue gases. The reason for the poorer drying in parallel flow is mainly the unfavorable distribution of the evaporation temperature. In steam drying, the difference in the size is not so great, since the evaporation takes place approximately at constant temperature.

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