Airflow resistance of sugar beets
Why do some sugar beet piles stay stable for months while others overheat and lose sugar fast? New data shows that root size, debris, and airflow direction radically change ventilation resistance - and your fan requirements. In this article, we break down the numbers and translate them into practical engineering rules.
Airflow Resistance in Sugar Beet Storage: Data-Driven Design for Better Ventilation
Why root size, foreign matter, and airflow direction decide your fan power, hot spots, and storage losses.
During long campaigns, sugar beets can sit in piles for 100–120 days. All this time, roots keep respiring — releasing heat, moisture, and CO₂.
Without properly engineered ventilation, piles develop hot spots, mold, and excessive sugar losses that can reach 0.15–0.25 kg sugar per ton per day.
The core of the problem is airflow resistance — how hard it is to push air through packed roots.
Key takeaway: higher bulk density and more soil/debris = higher resistance → you need more fan static pressure to maintain the same airflow.
What Drives Airflow Resistance?
Several physical and operational factors control how easily air moves through a sugar beet pile:
1. Root Size
Small sugar beets (< 1.2 kg) can have up to 1.9× higher resistance compared to large roots. Fine, dense packing leaves fewer air channels.
2. Foreign Matter (Soil & Plant Debris)
Soil and plant residues significantly increase resistance:
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at high airflow (~0.55 m³/s·m²) → up to 2.6× higher resistance vs clean roots,
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at low airflow (~0.06 m³/s·m²) → the penalty is much worse: up to 6.8× higher.
3. Airflow Direction
Horizontal airflow tests showed up to ~52% higher resistance than vertical flow, due to tighter packing and longer path lengths.
4. Packing & Bulk Density
Higher bulk density = lower porosity = more pressure drop per meter of pile depth.
Over-compaction during piling directly translates into higher fan energy and poorer uniformity.
Measured Physical Properties (Test Batches)
| Root Type | Foreign Matter | Moisture (wb %) | Bulk Density (kg/m³) | Porosity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small (<1.2 kg) | 0% | ~67.3 | 682–688 | ~45 |
| Small (<1.2 kg) | 4.3–4.4% | ~67.3 | 699–722 | ~42 |
| Large (>1.2 kg) | 0% | ~69.5 | 646–665 | ~47–48 |
| Large (>1.2 kg) | 4.4–4.6% | ~69.5 | 683–692 | ~44–45 |
| Mixed | 0% | ~69.1 | 635–665 | ~46–48 |
| Mixed | ~8.5% | ~69.1 | ~715 | ~41 |
Trend: more foreign matter → higher bulk density and lower porosity across all size groups.
How Resistance Scales With Operating Conditions
The experiments evaluated pressure drop per meter of pile depth at ventilation rates representative of real storage conditions:
-
High airflow (~0.55 m³/s·m²)
– foreign matter increased resistance up to 2.6× versus clean roots. -
Low airflow (~0.06 m³/s·m²)
– the effect was amplified: resistance up to 6.8× higher with debris. -
Horizontal vs vertical flow
– horizontal runs generally showed higher resistance, reflecting tighter packing and less efficient air paths.
Design hint: At low airflows, any “debris penalty” becomes much larger. Keeping roots clean and airflow stable early in the campaign is critical for performance and energy efficiency.
Engineering Implications
What does all this mean for engineers and plant managers?
-
Size distribution matters
Chambers with a high share of small roots will need higher fan static pressure for the same air rate. -
Design for ΔP, not just m³/h
Specify fans based on pressure drop per meter of pile depth, including bulk density and porosity — not only nominal airflow. -
Debris control = fan control
Cleaning roots before piling reduces pressure drop, lowers energy consumption, and improves airflow uniformity. -
Duct layout is critical
Ventilation duct spacing and geometry should target uniform face velocity across the pile to avoid hot spots and cold pockets.
Operational Playbook for Better Beet Storage
To translate the physics into daily practice:
-
Minimize soil and plant parts at harvest
Use cleaning equipment or pre-cleaning passes where possible. -
Avoid over-compaction during piling
Build layers consistently; don’t drive heavy machinery repeatedly over the same zone. -
Monitor temperature and CO₂
Rising CO₂ often signals insufficient airflow and precedes heating. -
Audit early lots (first 7–10 days)
Check for uneven temperatures and adjust fan operation or ducting before issues escalate.
Modeling Pressure Drop
Airflow–pressure relationships were fitted with standard bulk material models (e.g. Shedd; Hukill & Ives) with R² ≈ 0.96–0.99.
These curves can be used to:
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estimate required fan static pressure for a given pile depth and target air rate,
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compare clean vs contaminated scenarios,
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validate design decisions during engineering reviews,
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inform upgrades to existing systems.
Bottom Line
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Small roots and debris increase resistance — size grading and cleaning pay back through lower energy use and fewer hot spots.
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Direction and packing shape porosity — use vertical airflow where possible, or compensate with fan and duct sizing.
-
Better airflow uniformity = lower sugar losses — directly improving factory throughput and campaign stability.
Want to Design or Upgrade a Sugar Beet Storage System?
Agrovent helps plants and sugar companies translate lab data and field measurements into practical ventilation designs:
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fan selection and duct layout,
-
pile geometry and airflow modeling,
-
energy optimization and monitoring strategies.
📞 Call: +971 50 437 7119
📧 Email: info@agrovent.com
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