May 15, 2025
Conference Paper

Estimating Scaled Cloud Height in Pulse Jet Mixed Vessels

Abstract

To suspend and mix radioactive slurries without pumps or impellers, the performance of pulsed jet mixed vessels has been investigated. The slurry in the pulse tubes is expelled impinging upon the vessel floor and lifting solids to a “cloud height” in a cyclic process. Experiments measuring cloud height for a variety of waste simulants have been conducted for vessel configurations that varied vessel diameter, fill height and pulse tube number, volume, and nozzle diameter. The elevation to which suspended particles rise is termed the cloud height and derives from a balance between the fluid forces of the jet and the gravitational forces acting on the particle ensemble. Here we use scaling to estimate the cloud height based on conservation of mass and momentum and jet similarity. We find that the cloud height varies with the nozzle exit velocity to the 2/3 power in agreement with observations.

Published: May 15, 2025

Citation

Pease L.F., J.A. Bamberger, R.C. Daniel, and M.J. Minette. 2024. Estimating Scaled Cloud Height in Pulse Jet Mixed Vessels. In Proceedings of the ASME 2024 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, (IMECE2024) November 17-21, 2024, Portland, Oregon, 8 (Fluids Engineering), Paper No: IMECE2024-143209, V008T10A044. Washington, District Of Columbia:American Society of Mechanical Engineers. PNNL-SA-198437. doi:10.1115/IMECE2024-143209

Research topics