4 resultados para Mass Flow
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
O presente trabalho centrou-se na otimização do rendimento térmico de duas caldeiras aquatubulares da empresa RAR- Refinaria de Açúcar Reunidas, com a finalidade de identificar onde ocorrem perdas de energia e, desta forma, propor soluções para a sua minimização. Para tal, realizaram-se ensaios em duas caldeiras da empresa providas de queimadores mistos, ou seja podem operar com fuelóleo e gás natural, tanto individualmente, como simultaneamente, sendo que para a realização dos ensaios apenas se utilizou o fuelóleo devido ao seu menor custo. Na caldeira designada por 1 realizaram-se ensaios para os caudais de 300, 500, 800, 1000, 1200, 1400 e 1600 kg/h de fuelóleo. A gama de rendimentos térmicos obtida foi entre 88,3 e 91,2%. Na caldeira designada por 3, efetuaram-se ensaios para os caudais de fuelóleo de 300, 500, 700, 900, 1000, 1200, 1400, 1500 e 1800 kg/h e os rendimentos térmicos obtidos foram entre 85,2 e 88,0%. Em ambas as caldeiras e para caudais baixos verificou-se que a quantidade de ar introduzida no processo de combustão era superior à necessária, conduzindo a uma diminuição dos valores de rendimento térmico. Para 500 kg/h de fuelóleo, por exemplo, a quantidade de ar utilizada foi cerca de duas vezes superiores ao valor estequiométrico. Tendo em conta estes factos, foi proposto ao gestor de energia a implementação de uma nova relação de ar/combustível vs caudal de combustível no sistema de controlo das referidas caldeiras. Após alguns testes (excluindo 300 kg/h de fuelóleo devido a questões de operação), considerou-se como caudal mínimo de operação os 500 Kg/h de fuelóleo nas respetivas caldeiras 1 e 3. Verificou-se que os rendimentos térmicos aumentaram, no caso da caldeira 1, para valores entre os 90,1 e 91,3% e, na caldeira 3, para valores entre 89,0 e 90,9%. Por fim, efetuou-se uma breve análise económica com o intuito de se avaliar e quantificar o que a empresa pode poupar com esta medida. O lucro anual pode oscilar entre 14.400 e 62.640€ ou 104.400 e 136.800€, para as caldeiras 1 e 3, respetivamente.
Resumo:
Sulfadiazine is an antibiotic of the sulfonamide group and is used as a veterinary drug in fish farming. Monitoring it in the tanks is fundamental to control the applied doses and avoid environmental dissemination. Pursuing this goal, we included a novel potentiometric design in a flow-injection assembly. The electrode body was a stainless steel needle veterinary syringe of 0.8-mm inner diameter. A selective membrane of PVC acted as a sensory surface. Its composition, the length of the electrode, and other flow variables were optimized. The best performance was obtained for sensors of 1.5-cm length and a membrane composition of 33% PVC, 66% onitrophenyloctyl ether, 1% ion exchanger, and a small amount of a cationic additive. It exhibited Nernstian slopes of 61.0 mV decade-1 down to 1.0×10-5 mol L-1, with a limit of detection of 3.1×10-6 mol L-1 in flowing media. All necessary pH/ionic strength adjustments were performed online by merging the sample plug with a buffer carrier of 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid, pH 4.9. The sensor exhibited the advantages of a fast response time (less than 15 s), long operational lifetime (60 days), and good selectivity for chloride, nitrite, acetate, tartrate, citrate, and ascorbate. The flow setup was successfully applied to the analysis of aquaculture waters. The analytical results were validated against those obtained with liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry procedures. The sampling rate was about 84 samples per hour and recoveries ranged from 95.9 to 106.9%.
Resumo:
Abstract: Preferential flow and transport through macropores affect plant water use efficiency and enhance leaching of agrochemicals and the transport of colloids, thereby increasing the risk for contamination of groundwater resources. The effects of soil compaction, expressed in terms of bulk density (BD), and organic carbon (OC) content on preferential flow and transport were investigated using 150 undisturbed soil cores sampled from 15 × 15–m grids on two field sites. Both fields had loamy textures, but one site had significantly higher OC content. Leaching experiments were conducted in each core by applying a constant irrigation rate of 10 mm h−1 with a pulse application of tritium tracer. Five percent tritium mass arrival times and apparent dispersivities were derived from each of the tracer breakthrough curves and correlated with texture, OC content, and BD to assess the spatial distribution of preferential flow and transport across the investigated fields. Soils from both fields showed strong positive correlations between BD and preferential flow. Interestingly, the relationships between BD and tracer transport characteristics were markedly different for the two fields, although the relationship between BD and macroporosity was nearly identical. The difference was likely caused by the higher contents of fines and OC at one of the fields leading to stronger aggregation, smaller matrix permeability, and a more pronounced pipe-like pore system with well-aligned macropores.
Resumo:
The flow rates of drying and nebulizing gas, heat block and desolvation line temperatures and interface voltage are potential electrospray ionization parameters as they may enhance sensitivity of the mass spectrometer. The conditions that give higher sensitivity of 13 pharmaceuticals were explored. First, Plackett-Burman design was implemented to screen significant factors, and it was concluded that interface voltage and nebulizing gas flow were the only factors that influence the intensity signal for all pharmaceuticals. This fractionated factorial design was projected to set a full 2(2) factorial design with center points. The lack-of-fit test proved to be significant. Then, a central composite face-centered design was conducted. Finally, a stepwise multiple linear regression and subsequently an optimization problem solving were carried out. Two main drug clusters were found concerning the signal intensities of all runs of the augmented factorial design. p-Aminophenol, salicylic acid, and nimesulide constitute one cluster as a result of showing much higher sensitivity than the remaining drugs. The other cluster is more homogeneous with some sub-clusters comprising one pharmaceutical and its respective metabolite. It was observed that instrumental signal increased when both significant factors increased with maximum signal occurring when both codified factors are set at level +1. It was also found that, for most of the pharmaceuticals, interface voltage influences the intensity of the instrument more than the nebulizing gas flowrate. The only exceptions refer to nimesulide where the relative importance of the factors is reversed and still salicylic acid where both factors equally influence the instrumental signal. Graphical Abstract ᅟ.