Pannier,
Hydro-cyclone separation is a good idea in principle. From my experience
with these, I should think you will be looking at a bank of several small
diameter units manifolded together on all three pipes (inlet, apex and
vortex finder). If these are above the reactor and uninsulated, the m
IL PROTECTED]>; mohan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
padmanabhan paramasevam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, July 27, 2003 2:45 PM
Subject: Re: [biofuels-biz] Fwd: [biofuel] Mixing times for complete
reactions- was Re: Max capacity
> Helo to gobie ,Paul and Miller
>
> W
Tom:
Thanks for the tip.
Jim Miller
cc: Randy Hutchinson
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Jim- This probably won't be a good idea. Nitrile
> impellers dissolve in
> biodiesel in just a few months, standing or in use.
> While brass is a catalyst for
> oxidation of biodiesel, yielding a green sl
Jim- This probably won't be a good idea. Nitrile impellers dissolve in
biodiesel in just a few months, standing or in use. While brass is a catalyst
for
oxidation of biodiesel, yielding a green slime and degraded fuel. The safe
impellers are cast iron, plastic or stainless steel.
I'm not o
Helo to gobie ,Paul and Miller
We are interested to design the use of solar enegy instead of wood as
fuel and looking for the innovative design. Is there any one who already have
done this design for recirculation using thermo siphon without pump , solar
heating, product se
Hi Jim
I made a mixing vessel from a 30 litre water pressure tank cut in half,
welded onto the ends of a 1.2 meter high cylinder (capacity of 160
litres) I used a 1/2 hp transfer pump with brass impeller, and I'm glad
I tried it with vegetable oil first. It would only run for a few minutes
be
- Original Message -
From: "jimmiller5417" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Has any successfully used a small recirculating pump to mix
> during the reaction time? A 1/4 hp Grunfos with nitrile, brass or
> other impellers should work. The amount of electricity used
> would be low. The pump ou
Has any successfully used a small recirculating pump to mix
during the reaction time? A 1/4 hp Grunfos with nitrile, brass or
other impellers should work. The amount of electricity used
would be low. The pump outlet would lead to a circular
manifold at the bottom of the tank with a inle
>I use a 700 watt power drill to mix 180 litres of oil/methanol. It's
>not an efficient motor, but suggests you'd need at least 5KW into a
>300 gallon tank. 3 phase is more efficient so you might get away with
>4Kw.
>
>The milk bulk tank "mixers" I've seen are really only stirrers.
>They'd struggl
I use a 700 watt power drill to mix 180 litres of oil/methanol. It's
not an efficient motor, but suggests you'd need at least 5KW into a
300 gallon tank. 3 phase is more efficient so you might get away with
4Kw.
The milk bulk tank "mixers" I've seen are really only stirrers.
They'd struggle
>To:
>Organization: Appal Energy Co-op
>From: "Appal Energy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Date: Fri, 8 Jun 2001 13:24:28 -0400
>Subject: [biofuel] Mixing times for complete reactions
>
>I know that there are differing beliefs on this list as to required
>mixing times for reaction completion.
>
>We never
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