(143e) Studying Mixing in Non-Newtonian Blue Maize Flour Suspension Using Color Analysis
AIChE Annual Meeting
2014
2014 AIChE Annual Meeting
North American Mixing Forum
Mixing in Multi-Phase Systems
Monday, November 17, 2014 - 1:38pm to 1:55pm
Background: Non-Newtonian suspensions fluids occur in many relevant flow and mixing scenarios at the lab and industrial scale. The addition of acid or basic solutions to a non-Newtonian fluid is not an infrequent operation, particularly in Biotechnology applications where the pH of Non-Newtonian culture broths is usually regulated using this strategy.
Methodology and findings: We conducted mixing experiments in agitated vessels using Non-Newtonian blue maize flour suspensions. Acid or basic pulses were injected to reveal mixing patterns and flow structures and to follow their time evolution. No foreign pH indicator was used as blue maize flours naturally contain anthocyanins that act as a native, wide spectrum, pH indicator. We describe a novel method to quantitate mixedness and mixing evolution through Color Analysis (CA) in this system. Color readings corresponding to different times and locations within the mixing vessel were taken with a digital camera (or a colorimeter) and translated to the CIEL-Lab scale of colors. We use distances in the Lab space, a 3D color space, between a particular mixing state and the final mixing point to characterize segregation/mixing in the system.
Conclusion and relevance: Blue maize suspensions represent an adequate and flexible model to study mixing (and fluid mechanics in general) in Non-Newtonian suspensions using acid/base tracer injections. Simple strategies based on the evaluation of color distances in the CIEL-Lab space can be adapted to characterize mixedness and mixing evolution in experiments using blue maize suspensions.