2011
DOI: 10.1007/s11668-011-9496-2
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Modeling Erosion Wear Rates in Slurry Flotation Cells

Abstract: In processes using slurry as the working fluid, wear due to solid particles impinging on elements of the process units is a serious reliability issue. This study considers modeling wear damage in flotation cells, which are widely used in mineral processing. Flotation cells are typically cylindrical vessels where an impeller is used to agitate the fluid, enabling the liberation of the minerals from the slurry. Some solids, particularly those entrained in the impeller stream, can impact on the wall of the cell, … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, the equation of motion can be simplified to the following form: where [ 27 ] wherein Re p is the particle Reynolds number and is given as [ 28 30 ] …”
Section: Governing Equations Of Turbulent Micro- and Nanofluids Ermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, the equation of motion can be simplified to the following form: where [ 27 ] wherein Re p is the particle Reynolds number and is given as [ 28 30 ] …”
Section: Governing Equations Of Turbulent Micro- and Nanofluids Ermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some techniques do allow for short assessment of the wear rate on a surface without running a component to failure. The multilayer paint technique, used by Wu et al [1] Lipsett and Bhushan [2] and others, is a fast qualitative visualization method for determining the high wear regions of a turbo machine, or a stationary vessel with slurry flowing through it. Results using this method are helpful to designers interested in modifying impeller and casing geometry; however, this method can quantify the wear rate only with controlled paint layers (thickness and material properties), which is hard to standardize because of the dependence of the paint application method.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%