Investigation of the Use of a Vortex Flow to Separate Oil from an Oil-Water Mixture.

Abstract

A study was conducted to investigate the feasibility of using a vortex separator as a component of an oil spill clean-up system. This device separates the oil from an oil-water mixture in a continuous manner and provides individual outlets for the oil and the water. The study reported herein consisted of two parts: (1) an experimental investigation of a laboratory-scale model vortex separator to determine its performance throughout a variety of geometric and flow conditions, and (2) an analytic evaluation of a full-scale vortex separator including the necessary pumps and prime movers. The results of the tests showed that it is possible to capture greater than 85 percent of the injected oil and that the captured oil can contain less than 15 percent water. Degradation in the vortex separator performance occurs whenever attempts are made to remove the oil at flow rates greater or less than the injected oil flow rate. Based on average residence time, criteria are given for design of a full-scale vortex separator. The analytic evaluation of full-scale vortex separators included studies to determine the sizes, weights, and costs of separators, pumps and motors (or other prime movers) for volume flow rates between 1000 and 100,000 gpm. The results of these studies showed that the components necessary are all commercially available. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 01, 1970
Accession Number
AD0716309

Entities

People

  • Arthur E. Mensing
  • Richard C. Stoeffler
  • Thomas E. Hoover
  • W. Richard Davison

Organizations

  • United Aircraft Corporation

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Degradation
  • Flow Rate
  • Models
  • Oil Spills
  • Scale Models
  • Separators
  • Test And Evaluation

Readers

  • Environmental Engineering
  • Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Dynamics.
  • Petroleum Engineering