- 
								
 - Posts: 2916
 - Joined: Mon Aug 30, 2004 10:19 pm
 
There is probably also no turbulence in knitted tubes, but I have to admit that from a macroscopic point of view, it is not possible to tell the difference between pure secondary flow (=radial mixing) and turbulence. The performance (HETP) of a knitted tube is as good as a straight tube would be under turbulent conditions, and - contrary to straight tubes - one can not see a boundary between laminar flow and turbulent flow in knitted tubes, neither from the standpoint of performance nor from the standpoint of pressure.
In straight tubes, the onset of turbulence is marked by a sharp increase in pressure as the flow rate is increased. This does not happen in packed columns, where the increase in flow rate results in a directly proporational increase in pressure. No change in permeability = no change in flow character = no evidence of turbulence. Hans, I hope that this answers your question.
In knitted tubes, the change in the permeability is rather gradual, and it happens at MUCH slower velocities than those that cause turbulence. The ratio of the onset of secondary flow in well designed knitted tubes to the onset of turbulence in straight tubes is in the order of 200+. That is about the difference between a jogger and an airplane...
