Hiroyuki Kage
Kyushu Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Hiroyuki Kage.
Chemical Engineering Journal | 2002
Hironao Ogura; Tetsuya Yamamoto; Hiroyuki Kage; Yoshizo Matsuno; Arun S. Mujumdar
Results of an exploratory experimental study of a chemical heat pump (CHP) assisted convective dryer are presented. The CaO/H2O/Ca(OH)2 gas–solid reversible hydration/dehydration reaction is used to store and recover heat from the dryer exhaust air to enhance the thermal efficiency of the dryer. The CHP unit can be operated to increase the temperature level and also to dehumidify the air, which is a particularly attractive feature for drying. Results are presented for a single cylindrical reactor to study the effects of the heat exchange conditions on hot air production. The results show that the hot air production is improved by enlarging the heat exchanger, increasing the heat transfer rates by use of stainless mesh and increasing the air flow rate.
Energy | 2003
Hironao Ogura; Tetsuya Yamamoto; Hiroyuki Kage
In order to save energy and decrease environmental impacts of thermal energy utilization systems, a CaO/H2O/Ca(OH)2 chemical heat pump (CHP) can be used for high-density heat storage and the cooling/heating functions. In this paper, the performance of the CHP for distinctive functions was examined in comparison with that of the other heat pumps based on the authors’ experimental and theoretical studies over ten years on the CaO/H2O/Ca(OH)2 CHPs. As a result, the CaO/H2O/Ca(OH)2 CHPs are found to work more efficiently than other types of heat pumps for wider operating temperature ranges in appropriate heat source conditions.
Powder Technology | 1983
Yoshizo Matsuno; Hisamori Yamaguchi; T. Oka; Hiroyuki Kage; Ko Higashitani
Abstract Dilute particle concentrations are detected by optic fiber probe with a core diameter in excess of the particle diameter. After calibration of the probe, its application to freeboard concentrations is checked. The calibration curve of the probe is determined by detecting known concentrations of free-falling particles, at terminal velocity. The carryover stream of a gas-fluidized bed is thereafter simultaneously probed and collected in a cyclone separator. The linear relationship between probe signal and concentration and the good freeboard correlation obtained, confirms the usefulness of the technique.
Advanced Powder Technology | 2000
Hiroyuki Kage; Michiyo Agari; Hironao Ogura; Yoshizo Matsuno
Abstract Pressure fluctuations were measured in a fluidized bed plenum and power spectral density functions obtained by fast Fourier transform (FFT) analysis of the pressure fluctuation and its confidence limit for the diagnosis of fluidization were investigated. Various species of fluidized beds, which consist of Groups A, B or D particles of Geldarts classification and their mixtures, were used. Species of fluidizing particles, weight fraction of particles in bed and bed height strongly influenced the mode of fluidization. They were also significantly reflected on the power spectral density function. From experimental results, it is concluded that frequency analysis of pressure fluctuation is useful to obtain information about fluidization and to diagnose the fluidized bed, while it has a limit for its ability for detection of the fluidization mode.
Drying Technology | 2005
Hironao Ogura; Tstsuya Yamamoto; Yasufumi Otsubo; Hiroki Ishida; Hiroyuki Kage; Arun S. Mujumdar
ABSTRACT This article presents results of an experimental investigation on the controllability of hot air production using a pair of chemical heat pumps (CHP). The objective of this study is to determine how a CHP-assisted batch dryer can be operated effectively. The CHP uses the well-known CaO/H2O/Ca(OH)2 hydration/dehydration reaction, which is reversible. The hot air temperature can be controlled by adjusting the reactor temperature, and pressure, as well as thermal power supplied to it. It is shown that hot air can be produced in both the heat storage and heat release steps of the CHP.
Powder Technology | 1996
Hiroyuki Kage; Toru Takahashi; Takayuki Yoshida; Hironao Ogura; Yoshizo Matsuno
Abstract Seed particles were coated with a powder in a fluidized bed by atomizing a suspension of the powder and then measuring the coating efficiency. This depends on the operating conditions, for example, the concentration of the powder and binder in the suspension, the bed temperature, the humidity of fluidizing gas and the feed rate of the suspension. An index, R, which evaluates quantitatively the drying conditions in a fluidized bed, is defined as the ratio of the humidity of outlet gas to its maximum humidity achieved at the saturation. It was confirmed that the effects of bed temperature, humidity of fluidizing gas and feed rate of suspension on the coating efficiency were all correlated by the index. The index proposed here is useful for estimating the coating ability of the materials used and of the fluidized bed coater.
Powder Technology | 2003
Hiroyuki Kage; Ryuhei Abe; Ryusuke Hattanda; Tao Zhou; Hironao Ogura; Yoshizo Matsuno
Circulating fluidized bed was proposed to be used as a coater, and coating experiments of glass beads with silica powder were performed in a circulating fluidized bed. Glass beads and silica powder were chosen as model particles, because their shape was almost spherical. The respective effects of gas flow rates supplied from a distributor and from an air nozzle for solid circulation, feed rate of powder suspension and particle content in the bed on coating efficiency and agglomeration are mainly discussed. Coating efficiency in circulating fluidized bed coater was correlated well with solid circulation time rather than with gas flow rates or solid circulation rate, while the agglomeration among core particles was mainly governed by solid circulation rate.
Drying Technology | 1999
Hironao Ogura; Rui Shimojyo; Hiroyuki Kage; Yoshizo Matsuno; Arun S. Mujumdar
ABSTRACT A chemical heat pump (CHP) utilizes reversible reactions involving significant endothermic and exothermic heats of reaction in order to develop a heat pump effect by storing and releasing energy while transforming it from chemical to thermal energy and vice versa. In this paper, we present a mathematical model and its numerical solution for the heat and mass transport phenomena occurring in the reactant particle bed of the CHP for heat storage and cold/hot heat generation based on the CaO/Ca(OH)2 reversible hydration/dehydration reaction Transient conservation equations of mass and energy transport including chemical kinetics are solved numerically subject to appropriate boundary and initial conditions to examine the influence of the mass transfer resistance on the overall performance of this CHP configuration. These results are presented and discussed with the aim of enhancing the CHP performance in next generation reactor designs.
Drying Technology | 2001
Hironao Ogura; Hiroki Ishida; Ryuta Yokooji; Hiroyuki Kage; Yoshizo Matsuno; Arun S. Mujumdar
The authors have been studying Chemical Heat Pumps (CHP) from the viewpoints of energy saving and environmental impact. The CHP can store thermal energy in the form of chemical energy by an endothermic reaction, and release it at various temperature levels during heat demand periods by exo/endothermic reactions. The authors have proposed in an earlier study a novel chemical heat pump (CHP) system for environmentally-friendly effective utilization of thermal energy in drying as a chemical heat pump dryer (CHPD). In this exploratory study, we test the effectiveness of operating the proposed CHPDs experimentally. Basic experiments on the CHPDs such as hot dry air production for convective drying are performed on lab-scale CHPD apparatuses using gas–solid reactions in calcium oxide/calcium hydroxide reactant beds. The proposed CHPDs are found to produce hot air by CHP operation for drying. The temperature levels of the produced hot air and the reaction rates/conversions are as good as in the case of hot water supply system using basically same CHP operation. The cold heat for air dehumidification is also found to be generated/recovered by the same CHPD system. The generated heat amounts can be increased by changing the operating conditions although the heat recovery must be enhanced for practical application of CHPDs.
Advanced Powder Technology | 2001
Tao Zhou; Hiroyuki Kage; Shunpei Funaoka; Hironao Ogura; Yoshizo Matsuno
The expansion of free bubbling gas fluidized beds has been investigated experimentally in a two-dimensional perspex-walled bed. Glass beads were fluidized with dried air at varying gas velocities, while the bed was vibrated at different frequencies, amplitudes and directions to study their effects on the fluidization quality. The experimental results showed that the particle flow pattern depends on the vibration direction, especially at superficial gas velocities less than the minimum fluidization velocity Umf. The effect of horizontal vibration on fluidization behavior of glass beads exists at superficial gas velocities less than Umf, while the effect of vertical vibration on fluidization behavior still exists even at higher superficial gas velocities than Umf.