A procedure involving high speed cine photography and novel optical probes has been used to study droplet interaction phenomena in liquid-liquid dispersions. Coalescence and breakup events were observed and the rate of coalescence was measured at various positions in a stirred tank for dispersions of methylisobutylketone in water. For the conditions studied, drop breakup occurred near the impeller and droplet coalescence predominated at other locations, as expected. However, the extent of this behavior was unexpected. Beyond distances from the impeller region of order of only 16 the impeller diameter, breakup was virtually nonexistent. Outside the impeller region, extensive coalescence measurements showed (1) collisions between droplets are extremely inefficient for this chemically equilibrated system—at most 10% of collisions result in a coalescence, (2) only binary coalescence occurs even at the highest dispersed phase concentration investigated, (3) coalescence rate shows little preference on drop size, and (4) the coalescence rate is directly proportional to turbulence level; that is, the highest coalescence rates occur closest to the impeller. On the basis of these measurements, drop balance methods and a circulation path model were used to relate the drop size distribution at various locations in the region where coalescence predominates. In this case good agreement was obtained between measured and predicted drop size distributions.
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