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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Influence of bundle porosity on shell-side hydrodynamics and mass transfer in regular fiber arrays: A computational study
N. CancillaL. GurreriM. La RosaM. CiofaloA. CipollinaA. TamburiniG. Micalesubject
Fluid Flow and Transfer ProcessesComputational Fluid Dynamics Hollow fiber membrane Entrance effects Darcy permeability Mass transfer coefficient HemodialysisSettore ING-IND/26 - Teoria Dello Sviluppo Dei Processi ChimiciMass transfer coefficientHemodialysisSettore ING-IND/25 - Impianti ChimiciMechanical EngineeringEntrance effectsComputational Fluid DynamicsCondensed Matter PhysicsDarcy permeabilitySettore ING-IND/19 - Impianti NucleariHollow fiber membranedescription
CFD predictions of the effects of a fiber bundle porosity on shell-side hydrodynamics and mass transfer under conditions of steady laminar flow were obtained. Fluid was assumed to flow around regular hexag-onal or square arrays of cylindrical fibers of different pitch to diameter ratios, yielding bundle porosities ranging from the theoretical minimum up to similar to 1. A large number of axial, transverse and mixed flow combinations were simulated by letting the axial and transverse flow Reynolds numbers and the trans-verse flow attack angle vary. Both fully developed and developing conditions (entrance effects) were con-sidered. The continuity and momentum equations, along with a transport equation for the concentra-tion of a high-Schmidt number solute, were solved by a finite volume CFD code. Fully developed condi-tions were simulated by the well-established "unit cell" approach, in which the computational domain is two-dimensional and includes a single fiber with the associated fluid, periodic boundary conditions are imposed between all opposite sides and compensative terms are introduced to account for large-scale longitudinal or transversal gradients. Developing flow was studied by using a fully three-dimensional computational domain. Predictions were validated against experimental, computational and analytic liter-ature results. The simulations showed that lattices with different porosities exhibit a qualitatively similar behavior, but differ significantly in important quantities such as the Darcy permeability, the Sherwood number and the hydrodynamic and mass transfer development length.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2023-04-01 | International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer |