Granular mixing and flow dynamics in horizontal stirred bed reactors
This work addresses optimization challenges in gas-phase polyolefin production, though it is incremental as it applies established DEM methods to a specific industrial reactor.
The study investigated how rotation speed and fill level affect granular mixing and flow in horizontal stirred bed reactors, finding that higher rotation speeds accelerate axial homogenization and increase dispersion, while higher fill levels slow mixing but enhance particle circulation.
Horizontal stirred bed reactors (HSBRs) are used in gas--phase polyolefin production, where efficient solids mixing and controlled residence time distributions are essential for product quality and stability. Despite their industrial relevance, the influence of operating conditions on granular flow and mixing in HSBRs is not well understood. Discrete Element Method (DEM) simulations are used to study the effects of rotation speed and fill level on particle motion, mixing, and axial transport in a lab--scale HSBR. An industrial--grade polypropylene powder is modelled using calibrated contact parameters. Mixing is quantified using the Lacey index in axial (z) and cross--sectional (xy) directions. Particle circulation is characterised via cycle--time analysis and a coarse--grained angular velocity field. Axial dispersion coefficients are obtained from particle trajectories using both Einstein--type and cycle--based approaches, and validated with a diffusion model predicting the axial Lacey index. Results show that axial mixing depends strongly on rotation speed and fill level: higher rotation speeds accelerate homogenization, while higher fill levels slow mixing. Cross--sectional mixing is mainly sensitive to rotation speed, with fill--level effects diminishing at higher speeds. Cycle time decreases with increasing rotation speed and fill level, indicating enhanced circulation. Axial dispersion increases with rotation speed but decreases with fill level, with consistent results across methods. These findings reveal trade--offs between axial mixing, circulation, and dispersion, highlighting the need to balance operating conditions and demonstrating the capability of DEM to support HSBR optimisation.