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Drying: General Methods of Drying

There are two main methods for drying materials: batch drying and continuous drying. Batch drying involves inserting material into drying equipment for a set period of time, while continuous drying continuously adds and removes material from the dryer. Drying rates can be estimated using rate of drying curves, which plot the drying rate against moisture content over time. These curves typically have three periods: an increasing rate period, constant rate period, and falling rate period. Various factors influence the movement of moisture within solid materials undergoing drying.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
193 views7 pages

Drying: General Methods of Drying

There are two main methods for drying materials: batch drying and continuous drying. Batch drying involves inserting material into drying equipment for a set period of time, while continuous drying continuously adds and removes material from the dryer. Drying rates can be estimated using rate of drying curves, which plot the drying rate against moisture content over time. These curves typically have three periods: an increasing rate period, constant rate period, and falling rate period. Various factors influence the movement of moisture within solid materials undergoing drying.

Uploaded by

bluestardiver
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DRYING

General Methods of Drying


• Batch:
o Material is inserted into the drying equipment
and drying proceed for a given period of time

• Continuous:
o The material is continuously added to the dryer
and dried material continuously removed

• Based on the physical conditions used to add heat


and remove water vapor:
o Heat is added by direct contact with the heated
air at atm pressure, an the water vapor formed is
removed by the air
o Vacuum drying: the evaporation of water via low
pressure, heat by contact with a metal wall or by
radiation
o Freeze drying: water is sublimed from the frozen
material

Rate of Drying Curves


• To estimate the size of dryer needed, various
operating conditions of humidity and temperature of
the air used, and the time needed
• Experimental determination of rate of drying

Drying 1
• For constant drying condition:

W − WS
Xt =
WS

Xt = free moisture content (kg H2O / kg dry solid) at


different times t hours in the drying period
W = weight of the wet solid (kg)
WS = weight of the dry solid (kg)

X = Xt – X*

X = free moisture content (kg free H2O / kg dry


solid)
X* = the equilibrium moisture content (kg
equilibrium H2O / kg dry solid)

• Method 1: plot X vs t
L S dX
R=−
A dt
R = the drying rate (kg H2O / h.m2
LS = dry solid used (kg)
A = exposed surface area (m2)

• Method 2: calculate the weight loss ∆X for a ∆t time


L S ∆X
R=−
A ∆t
The R is the average over the period ∆t and plotted at
the average concentration X

Drying 2
• Plot of rate-of-drying curve:

t=0 A or A’
A to B evaporation rate increases
B to C constant-rate-of-drying period
C to D falling-rate period (often linear)
C critical free moisture content XC
D to E falls more rapidly
E the equilibrium moisture content X*

Drying in the Constant-Rate Period


• The surface of the solid is initially very wet
• A continuous film of water on the drying surface
• The rate of evaporation is independent of the solid –
the same as the rate from a free liquid surface
• Increased roughness – higher rates

Drying in the Falling-Rate Period


• At critical free moisture content XC – insufficient
water on the surface to maintain a continuous film of
water
• Surface is no longer wetted
• Wetted area – continuous decreases until complete
dryness at D
• After D – the plane of evaporation recedes from the
surface
• Heat is transferred through the solid to the
vaporization zone
• The amount of moisture removed – relatively small
• The time required – long

Drying 3
Moisture Movement in Solids

• Liquid diffusion – if the wet solid is at T below Tb of


the liquid

• Vapour diffusion – if the liquid vaporizes within


material

• Knudsen diffusion – drying at very low T & p, eg.:


freeze drying

• Surface diffusion (possible but not proven)

• Hydrostatic pressure differences – when internal


vaporization rates exceed the rate of vapour transport
through the solid to the surroundings

• Capillary movement in porous solids


o Granular & porous solids (e.g.: clays, sand, soil
etc)
o Capillary action (not by diffusion) – provides
driving force for moving water through the pores
to the surface

• Effect of shrinkage
o Colloidal and fibrous materials (e.g. vegetables)
o Development of a hard layer – blaockage &
slows the drying rate (case hardening)

Drying 4
Calculation Methods for Constant-Rate Drying
Period

• Method 1: Use the experimental drying curve

Example:
A solid whose drying curve is represented by
(Figure) is to be dried from a free moisture content
X1 = 0.38 kg H2O/kg dry solid to X2 = 0.25 kg
H2O/kg dry solid. Estimate the time required.

From the Figure,


X1 = 0.38 t1 = 1.28 h
X2 = 0.25 t2 = 3.08 h
The time required: t = t2 – t1 = 1.80 h

• Method 2: use the rate-of-drying curve for constant-


rate period

L S dX
R=−
A dt
t2 =t X
L S 1 dX
t = ∫ dt =
t =0 A X∫ R
1 2

R = constant = RC

LS
t= (X1 − X 2 )
AR C

• Example: LS/A = 21.5, RC = 1.51 kg H2O/h.m2

Drying 5
Calculation Methods for Falling-Rate Drying Period
• Method using graphical integration

X
L S 1 dX
A X∫ R
t=
2

Material & Heat Balances for Continuous Dryers


• Simple heat and material balances

Entrance: solid enters at LS kg dry solid/h, having


free moisture content X1 and TS1
Exit: X2, TS2
Gas enters at rate G kg dry air/h, having a humidity
H2 kg H2O/kg dry air, TG2

• Material balance on the moisture:

GH2 + LSX1 = GH1 + LSX2

• Select a heat datum T0oC for the heat balance → 0oC


• The enthalpy of gas H’G in kJ/kg dry air.K

HG’ = cS(TG – T0) + Hλ0

Drying 6
λ0 = latent heat of water at T0oC (2501 kJ/kg at 0oC)
cS = humid heat (kJ/kg dry air.K)

cS = 1.005 + 1.88H

• The enthalpy of wet solid

HS’ = cpS(TS – T0) + XcpA(TS – T0)

cpS = heat capacity of the dry solid (kJ/kg dry


solid.K)
cpA = heat capacity of the liquid moisture (kJ/kg
H2O.K)

• The heat of wetting is neglected


• A heat balance on the dryer:

GH’G2 + LSH’S1 = GH’G1 + LSH’S2 + Q

Q = heat loss in the dryer (kJ/h)


For adiabatic process: Q = 0 and if heat is added, Q is
negative

• Example

Drying 7

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