â¢Â£<>, and p*0l are values in equilibrium with the liquid leaving the stage in question. From part
(a), (p*0j), = 240 mmHg. Substituting, we have
0.15
PCO!. , - 1036
240 - 1036
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 465
Similarly, for H2S
195 - 620
PHA , = 620 - (0.40)(425) = 450 mmHg
Proceeding as in part (a), we get
916
CO2 in K, = -- 0.84 = 0.0852 mol/mol gas in H2S in K, = 0.0419 mol/mol gas in
0.0848
Stage 2: CO2 in L2 = 0.150 + ---- = 0.354 mol/mol MEA
0.0417
H2S in L2 = 0.030 + - - = 0.130 mol/mol MEA
0.415
(A//)lb.above plate 1 = (0.0848 )(1.92)(44) + (0.0417)(1.91)(34) = 9.87 kj/mol gas in
9.87
Results for calculations proceeding upward are shown in Table 10-3. part B. Above stage 3 the
equilibrium solute pressures are not significant in the computation of pt. Further, since the specified
maximum allowable solute partial pressures in the outlet gas are far above the values in equilibrium
with the regenerated absorbent, it is apparent that the H2S will die out considerably faster than the
CO2 because of its higher £M, . Thus the stage requirement will be governed by CO2 absorption.
Writing Eq. (8-16) for m = 0. we have
N=
In (!-£ââ)
where N is the number of intervening stages with the specified EMr . For our case this equation
written for the stages above stage 3 becomes
N - 3 = _ ilkâ¢.- '/Pc°'- *J = _ '" (667/5-2) = 30
Ml-Wco,) In 0.85
Therefore N = 33, and 33 plates are required in the absorption tower. With a 60-cm tray spacing, the
tower would be on the order of 20 m high. D
It was assumed in the solution to part (b) of Example 10-2 that the gas and liquid
streams leaving a plate have the same temperature (thermal efficiency = 100
percent). This is not necessarily true. The gas and liquid equilibrate thermally
through a heat-transfer process; if the heat transfer is not rapid enough, the exit gas
and exit liquid will not have achieved identical temperatures. From basic mass- and
heat-transfer theory it can be deduced that thermal stage efficiencies generally will be
equal to or greater than mass-equilibrium efficiencies. In Example 10-2 the low
Murphree efficiencies for H2S and CO2 are caused by the fact that the full chemical
466 SEPARATION PROCESSES
solubility of each species is not available as an interfacial mass-transfer driving force.
This limitation does not occur for heat transfer; hence it is probable that the thermal-
equilibration efficiencies are relatively high. In any event, incomplete thermal equili-
bration on the plates would not change the plate requirement substantially, since the
equilibrium partial pressures of CO2 and H2S are important on only the bottom
three plates.
In Example 10-2 it was assumed that all the heat of absorption is carried down
with the liquid phase and that the sensible heat of the vapor is negligible. Because of
the high liquid-to-gas mass ratio this assumption is permissible for the overall
enthalpy balance through which the effluent liquid temperature is found; however,
the temperature profile for intermediate plates in the column can be influenced by the
vapor heat capacity, and a more precise computation should take this into account.
As already noted in Chap. 7, a maximum temperature can develop partway along an
absorption column if the counterflowing gas and liquid have comparable products of
flow rate and heat capacity and/or if the solvent has appreciable volatility. This
high-temperature region can provide the controlling pinch (closest approach of oper-
ating and equilibrium curves) for the absorption; thus it is important to model this
effect correctly. In a stage-to-stage calculation this can call for an overall iteration
loop on the temperature of the exit liquid.
Rowland and Grens (1971) have investigated stage-to-stage calculations for acid-
gas absorbers in some detail. They find that the method works well as long as the
product of flow rate and heat capacity of the liquid exceeds that of the gas by a factor
of 2 or more. If these products are of approximately the same magnitude, iteration on
the exit-liquid temperature is necessary and may require damping of temperature
changes between iterations in order to gain stability in the computation. If the
product of vapor-flow rate and heat capacity substantially exceeds that for the liquid
(an unusual case) errors in stage temperatures can build up prohibitively in a
bottom-up calculation. In such cases a successive-approximation solution, of the
type discussed later in this chapter, becomes preferable.
Part (b) of Example 10-2 was worked assuming constant values of Ew, . As is
amplified in Chap. 12. the extreme curvature of the equilibrium data for systems like
this can cause EM, (or EML) to vary greatly across a column. Rowland and Grens
(1971) present a calculation where £w, varies from 67 percent on the upper stages to
4 percent on the lower stages. Problem 12L considers the calculation of an H2S-CO2
absorber where the Murphree efficiency varies substantially from stage to stage.
Kent and Eisenberg (1976) have correlated available equilibrium data for H2S
and CO2 in solutions of monoethanolamine and diethanolamine in equation forms
that are convenient for use with computer calculations.
TRIDIAGONAL MATRICES
If we search for ways to combine Eqs. (10-1) to (10-5) algebraically to simplify the
system of equations, the most obvious step is to combine Eqs. (10-1) with the other
equations to eliminate either all the r^ p or all the /, p. This will remove N x R
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULT1COMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 467
equations and N x R unknowns. Arbitrarily, we shall eliminate the v}_ p and retain
the /j p. The sum of Eqs. (10-2) over all components and over the stages from p to
either end of the column provides the mass balance
FP-LP+1-IF fcf-i. v^ V,-» Tf, Tp.1) = 0 (10-12)
given by
Kj.
h.p-
(10-13)
where Lp and Vp are related through Eq. (10-11). SLp and SVp represent molar flows of
sidestreams of liquid and vapor, respectively, leaving stage p. The term z, p Fp repre-
sents the moles of j in feeds entering stage p.
Each set of N equations for each component can be solved for the N values of lj if
all values of SL, Sy, ZjF, V, and Kj are known. In general, the values of K, are
dependent upon compositions as well as temperature and pressure, and this serves to
make Eqs. (10-13) nonlinear. However, for cases where Kj does not depend upon
composition, e.g., distillation of ideal mixtures, a knowledge of all Tp and Vp and all
feed and product flows will serve to fix the K} and make Eqs. (10-13) a set of linear
equations, which are easily solved. Usually either or both the Tp and/or the Vp are
unknown, and we shall have to iterate upon values of those variables. This will result
in Eqs. (10-13) being a set of linear equations to be solved within each iteration.
However, their linearity is still a major advantage.
If the KJ values depend upon composition but only weakly, it is possible to
remove the nonlinearity by evaluating the K} for the compositions obtained in the
last previous iteration on Tp and/or Vp.
Once the K,. p and Vp have been assumed or set, Eqs. (10-13) for any component
become a family of linear equations of the form
=D
l + fl2/J2 +C21J3
(10-14)
-4.V /;.,>â¢-! +B.V'
;->
468 SEPARATION PROCESSES
where stages are numbered upward and
J, p- I p- 1
2
^ _ ^
N
**jl\ I ~^~^V'l/
'/
n â 1
Ll
P*
C i If I/
. "L.V T JVv 'N
1 £p 1 in one section of a cascade and Kj < 1 in
another section. Boston and Sullivan (1972) present a modification of the Thomas
method which can be used in such circumstances but requires more computing time.
Birmingham and Otto (1967) have demonstrated, in the context of absorber compu-
tations, that the Thomas method is much faster than earlier methods of solving
Eqs. (10-13) which used a stage-by-stage calculation.
60
21.8
9.4
62.5
18.6
X.I
65
16.1
6.9
67.5
13.8
5.9
70
12.2
5.1
Example 10-3 Natural fats occur as esters of fatty acids with glycerol, known as triglycerides. In the
manufacture of fatty acids, fatty alcohols, and soaps the triglycerides are split chemically, and the
fatty acids are separated, typically by vacuum distillation.
Another approach for separation would be fractional extraction of the triglycerides themselves.
Chueh and Briggs (1964) measured equilibrium distribution coefficients for triolein and trilinolein
between heptane and furfural. Triolein and trilinolein are triglycerides of oleic acid,
CH3(CH2),CH=CH(CH2)7COOH. and linoleic acid.
CH3(CH2)4CH=CHCH2CH=CH(CH2)7COOH.
respectively. Smoothed results at high dilution of the acids in the furfural phase and as a function of
temperature are:
wt fraction in heptane
wt fraction, in furfural
at high dilution
Temp., °C Triolein Trilinolein
Source: Data smoothed from Chueh and
Briggs (1964).
470 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Suppose that a mixer-settler extraction with five equilibrium stages is used to separate two feed
mixtures of mixed triolein and trilinolein:
Feed flow rate, kg/unit time
Feed stage Triolein Trilinolein
2 0.5 1.0
4 2.0 1.0
Pure heptane enters stage 1. and pure furfural enters stage 5, both at flow rates that are more than an
order of magnitude higher than the feed flows. The mass flow ratio of furfural to heptane is 10.0.
A temperature gradient is imposed on the extraction cascade, with stage 1 at 60°C, stage 5 at
70°C. and a linear variation of temperature in between. The purpose of this is to help remove
trilinolein from the triolein product through high temperature and lower KD and to help remove
triolein from the trilinolein product through low temperature and higher KD.
Find the recovery fractions of the two triglycerides in the two product streams leaving the
terminal stages.
SOLUTION If the temperature were constant, giving constant values of KD, the problem could be
solved using the multiple-section version of the Kremser-Souders-Brown equation. However, the
changing temperature makes the extraction factors for each component (the equivalent of Kt V/L)
different on each stage.
The temperatures are specified independently; the K/s are independent of composition because
of the high dilution; and the total flow rates of the phases are known because the high dilution and
the immiscibility of furfural and heptane keep the phase flows effectively constant from stage to stage.
Hence all the coefficients in Eqs. (10-13) are established, and we can use the Thomas method to solve
the resulting set of linear tridiagonal equations.
Values of A} p, Bt p, Cj_f. and D; â are obtained from Eqs. (10-15) to (10-20). When we let V
correspond to the mass flow rate of heptane and L to the mass flow rate of furfural, these equations
become
/l;..,= -O.IJC,,., 2j.P=fj l
,
1.276
0.8892
/4 2.846
2.484
«2
-0.4599
-0.7545
01
0
0
/3 1.866
2.869
*»3
1.755
1.079
02
0.2230
0.7547
/, 1.081
2.920
"3
-0.5699
-0.9269
93
0.2438
0.5666
/, 0.3400
1.505
Values of r, can then be obtained as (Kt V/L)r (; p:
Stage
Triolein
Trilinolein
1
0.3400
0.7412
1.505
1.415
2
1.081
2.011
2.920
2.365
472 SEPARATION PROCESSES
terms of t>/s and substitute into Eqs. (10-2), giving
MVJ,
I" J.P+I + 1+ xil â â¢;,.â-,- ),,="<">
(10-31)
If EVM j. Kj. V, and i- wefe known for each stage, Eqs. (10-31) would be a tridiagonal
linear set, solvable by the Thomas method. However, it appears that instabilities in
such a solution can occur from the way the EMV terms enter the equations. This
might be expected from the fact that solution of Eqs. (10-7) for ljtp does not
directionally represent a physical cause-and-effect situation. In general, therefore, it
appears best to handle Murphree efficiencies in a way that gives up the computata-
tional efficiency of the tridiagonal matrix.
Huber (1977) discusses ways of using the properties of a supertriangular matrix
(all nonzero elements located on the main diagonal or above) to handle a calculation
with specified Murphree efficiencies and/or with recycle, bypass, or interconnections
between different separators. His allowance for Murphree vapor efficiencies involves
repeated substitution of Eqs. (10-7), giving each vapor flow as a linear function of the
liquid flows on all stages below.
Also, as noted before, there are only R - 1 independent values of Murphree
efficiency for each stage if the interstage streams are dew-point and bubble-point
vapors and liquids. This problem is avoided if all EMVi are taken to be the same on
any stage, since the dependent EMV will then be equal to the others. Since there are
not yet any good bases for predicting individual-component EMVj values in a multi-
component system, the question of handling different EMyj for different components
appears not to have been addressed systematically, and therefore all EMVi on a stage
have usually been assumed to be equal, by default.
DISTILLATION WITH CONSTANT MOLAL OVERFLOW;
OPERATING PROBLEM
If constant molal overflow is postulated, the flows on each stage of a distillation can
be regarded as fixed if the product and reflux or boil-up flows are fixed. Hence
solution of a problem reduces to solution of the E. M, and S equations [Eqs. (10-1),
(10-2). (10-4) and (10-5)], the enthalpy-balance equations no longer being needed.
Constant molal overflow also generally implies that the Kj are at most only weak
functions of phase compositions; otherwise heat-of-mixing effects should cause
appreciable changes in interstage flows. In that case Eqs. (10-1) and (10-2) can be
combined into Eqs. (10-13), which can be made linear and solved by the Thomas
method provided the total number of stages is known, as in an operating problem.
Fixing the values of Kj to make Eqs. (10-13) linear requires assuming the tempera-
tures of all stages and, if necessary, basing activity coefficients on the phase composi-
tions obtained in a previous iteration or on assumed values. The principal aspect of
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 473
the problem is then converging the stage temperatures to the correct values. The
solution is iterative, i.e., assuming a set of stage temperatures, followed by solving
Eqs. (10-13) by the Thomas method to obtain values of /,, p, followed by using some
form of Eqs. (10-4) and/or (10-5) to obtain new values of stage temperatures, etc.
Solutions of this type are sometimes called Thiele-Geddes methods, after the original
paper based upon such an approach (Thiele and Geddes, 1933).
The most obvious procedure to use for correcting the stage temperatures in an
overall convergence loop is a simple bubble-point computation, one for each stage,
using the values of lj± â computed for that stage in the last previous iteration. The
bubble-point temperature so calculated would then be the postulated temperature
for the next iteration. This constitutes a direct-substitution convergence method
(Appendix A).
There are three drawbacks to the use of a simple bubble-point convergence loop
for each stage:
1. There is a tendency for persistence of a temperature profile which is initially uniformly too
high or too low. For example, a predominantly too high temperature profile will increase
the KJ. p unrealistically and will tend to place too much of the heavy components into the
overhead product. This will make all stages too rich in the heavy components and, in turn,
cause the bubble points to be too high. As a result the too high temperature profile is
carried into the next iteration.
2. The bubble-point calculation is itself iterative, adding another inner loop for each stage,
which serves to lengthen the computational time considerably.
3. Direct substitution of the calculated bubble point for each stage does not account for the
effect of temperature corrections to one stage on the component flows and hence the bubble
points of adjacent stages, coming through Eqs. (10-13).
We shall examine approaches to overcoming all three of these problems.
Persistence of a Temperature Profile That Is Too High or Too Low
One approach to the problem of persistence of an erroneously high or low tempera-
ture profile is to adjust the individual component flows on each stage before the
bubble points are computed. One of the signs of a uniformly too high or too low
temperature profile is a computed bottoms flow rate [I/, i from the Thomas-method
solution of Eqs. (10-13)] that is either too low or too high, respectively. Since the
product flow rates are usually taken to be specified, a logical step is to adjust the
individual-component flows in the bottoms and in the distillate to satisfy the total-
flow specifications. Holland (1963) and Hanson et al. (1962) have achieved consider-
able success by correcting the ratio hj/dj for each component by a single factor 0.
The necessary value of 0 is obtained from an iterative solution of the equation
The corrected ratio hj/dj is equal to 0 times the value of hj/dj computed in the
solution of the tridiagonal matrix in the last previous iteration [(kj/dj)cori =
474 SEPARATION PROCESSES
0(b/ A/jJcaic]. 8 found so as to satisfy Eq. (10-32) will then satisfy the specified d and b.
To correct the liquid compositions on each stage before the bubble-point calcu-
lation, Holland (1963) proposed correcting the component flows by the ratio
('j - Ex,- or In (Z>'y /x,) to zero, having computed both the r/s and
//s by using the tridiagonal-matrix solution followed by Eqs. (10-1). This last
procedure works well when the components cover a wide span of volatilities. Some
specific examples of implementations of one or a combination of these approaches
are given by Holland (1963, 1975), Billingsley (1970), Boston and Sullivan (1974), and
Lo (1975).
Allowing for the Effects of Changes on Adjacent Stages
In order to allow for the effects of changes in the temperature of adjacent stages on
the converged temperature for a stage, Newman (1963) has proposed a convergence
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 475
scheme in which Eq. (10-4) is evaluated at each stage and a multivariate Newton
procedure is used to find corrections to the temperatures of all stages simultaneously.
Equations (A-ll) (Appendix A) are employed, with xs replaced by 7^ and with/k(Tj,
T2,..., 7^,...) replaced by Z(, p â Lp. The subscript s also represents stage number.
Both p and s are used as subscripts for this purpose to emphasize that dlj_p/dTs
represents the partial derivative of the liquid flow of/ on one stage with respect to the
temperature of another stage. The partial derivatives in Eqs. (A-ll) become
(10-34)
If we ignore sidestreams and differentiate Eqs. (10-13) with respect to T,, we find that
,i,
IT. \ L
,
+fy..i-J£(»..,->..,-J-° ows)
df p is the Kronecker delta, which is 1 if the two subscripts are equal and 0 otherwise.
The quantities other than the derivatives in Eqs. (10-35) are evaluated with the
temperatures and component flows corresponding to the last previous solution of the
individual component mass balances. The last term involves 3KJiS/dT,, which must
be obtained somehow for each component on each stage. If equilibrium data are
available in simple algebraic form, it may be possible to use analytical expressions for
the BKj ,/dT,; otherwise they must be obtained from finite-difference calculations at
two slightly different temperatures.
Equations (10-35) for each component can be placed in the tridiagonal matrix
form of Eqs. (10-22), forming N x R such matrices corresponding to each combina-
tion of component j and stage s. The elements Ap, Bp, and Cp are the same as in
Eqs. (10-15) to (10-19), the /, p matrix is replaced by a corresponding dljt p/dTs matrix,
and the Dp terms become
D, = £lJl^&.p-i-*.,,) 1(dj)cac [numerator of Eq. (10-33)], and these
values will be normalized [denominator of Eq. (10-33)] so that the calculated \t p add to unity on
each stage:
Component
,.*
A
0.3020
28.271
0.5654
15.085
0.4100
15.085
0.2823
5.028
0.2180
B
0.6284
15.052
0.3011
13.389
0.3640
20.529
0.3842
9.124
0.3957
C
0.8357
6.676
0.1335
8.314
0.2260
17.816
0.3335
8.909
0.3863
1.0000
36.788
1.0000
53.430
1.0000
23.061
1.0000
t Obtained as /,-(<*,)ââ
J Obtained as (/;.,L,C x
8 Obtained as /;.,/!/,.,.
Notice that the result of the 0-method corrections has been to increase mole fractions of the light
component C and decrease mole fractions of the heavy component A in comparison to the
tridiagonal-matrix solution given in the problem statement. This keeps a too high temperature
profile from persisting into successive iterations.
New temperatures should then be obtained from bubble-point calculations. Because of the
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULT1COMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 479
These temperatures would he used to provide values of Kj for the second iteration. Different temper-
atures and presumably more rapid convergence would have been obtained by making the
component-flow corrections through one of the methods of Hanson et al. (1962) or Seppala and Luus
(1972).
(ft) Use of the Newman method requires that we first obtain the coefficients of Eqs. (10-35), put
in the form of tridiagonal matrices [Eqs. (10-22)]. For; = A and s = 1. for example, these coefficients
0.5067
-0.5067
0
0
0
The matrices contain a row for p = 0, corresponding to the reboiler.
The values of Ap, Bp.and Cp come from Eqs. (10-15) to (10-19). The values of D0 and D, come from
Eq. (10-36), where
3
-1
0
0
°1
-2
1.667
-1
0
0
0
-0.667
1.667
-1
0
0
0
-0.667
3
-1
0
0
0
-2
2j
KA. . ? ln KA. ,
(373)2
= 0.01522
and
K, , 8K,
100
.- = â (49.950)(0.01522) = 0.5067
I 1 J\J
This matrix would be solved for values of and Vp+ i,i+1 with coefficients involving quantities evaluated in the
ith iteration. There are N of these equations, forming a tridiagonal matrix which can
be solved by the Thomas method or any other suitable technique to give the total
interstage flows for the next iteration. This method will be rapidly convergent to the
extent that the mole fractions represented by /, p /Z/j p do not change greatly from
iteration to iteration.
For the dual-solvent extraction problem involving water, ethanol, acetone, and
chloroform discussed in Chap. 7, Tierney and Bruno (1967) show that their method
requires 6 iterations to achieve the same degree of convergence obtained by Hanson
et al. (1962) in 19 iterations. On the other hand, the Hanson et al. convergence
method should take considerably less time per iteration than the Tierney-Bruno
approach. The simple summation of (/,-. p), to obtain Lp_i + 1 by direct substitution
should take even less time per iteration.
Temperature loop Surjata (1961) and Friday and Smith (1964) propose a conver-
gence method for obtaining new Tp from enthalpy balances in the SR approach. The
method is a multivariate Newton approach with N variables in which Eqs. (10-3) for
constant composition and total flows are approximated by
[Hp(Tf+1, Tp. T,_ ,)]i + . - [HP(TP+1, Tp, Tp_,)],.
Here fif represents the nonclosure of the enthalpy balance [left-hand side of
Eq. (10-3)] for stage p.
The partial derivatives are given by
-^=-Lp+1cp+, (10-41)
1 'p+i
^=Lpcp+VpCp (10-42)
< IP
cHn
' 'P- i
(10-43)
where cp and Cp are the heat capacities of the liquid and the vapor, respectively.
leaving stage p. These heat capacities can be evaluated analytically or from computa-
tions of enthalpies at incrementally different temperatures.
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 489
When [Hp(Tp+l, Tp, Tp_,)], + 1 is set equal to zero, Eqs. (10-40)represent aset of
N linear equations, once again forming a tridiagonal matrix, solvable by the Thomas
method. The results of the solution are the values of AT],, which represent corrections
to be added onto the old Tp such that
TP.1.+ 1 = TP.,. + ATP (10-44)
Friday and Smith (1964) report that this method has worked well in a number of
applications of the SR arrangement.
RELAXATION METHODS
Another approach to the solution of the various equations involved in multicompo-
nent multistage separation processes is relaxation. In principle, relaxation proceeds by
following the transient behavior of the separation process as it approaches steady-
state operation. A set of interstage flows and stage compositions and temperatures is
first assumed. The variables corresponding to each stage are then altered so as to
relieve imbalances in enthalpy and component flows entering and leaving each stage.
The parameters for the (i + l)th iteration are obtained from the imbalance of flows in
the /th iteration.
As an example, upon allowing for transient operation Eqs. (10-2) become
Upd=Lp+lxj,p+1 + V,.iyj.ri ~ LpxJ.p-Vpyj,p+fj.p (10-45)
if we write the stage compositions as mole fractions. Up is the moles of liquid present
oh stage p, which is regarded as being well mixed. Because of the lower density, vapor
holdup is neglected in Eqs. (10-45). If Eq. (10-45) is put in finite-difference form
(d.\j p /dt replaced by A.VJ p/Af ), we can solve for A.X; p . which will be used to update
the assumed stage compositions from one iteration to the next through the
relationship
x/.*i+i-*J.*.f + A*/.i (10-46)
In order to do this we substitute all the values from the ith iteration into the right-
hand side of Eqs. (10-45) and solve for Ax, p.
Since the interstage flows and the compositions and temperatures of the adjacent
stages will have changed from the ith iteration to the (i + l)th iteration, there will
still be an imbalance, necessitating that parameters for the (i + 2)th iteration be
computed from the parameters from the (i + l)th iteration, etc.
The time increment used in the solution of the equations can be set more or less
arbitrarily, within limits, and the quantity wf = Ar/l/p thereby becomes an important
parameter, known as the relaxation factor, which governs the convergence properties
of the solution. For low values of the relaxation factor the steady-state solution is
reached very slowly. However, for too high values of (op the solution can become
oscillatory from iteration to iteration.
Relaxation methods are highly stable because of the analog to a physically
realizable transient start-up process. However, for the same reason, they converge
490 SEPARATION PROCESSES
relatively slowly. Their high stability can be helpful when one is confronted with a
problem where the KJip are strongly dependent upon composition; however, it is
also effective to attack such problems by using the successive-approximation
methods presented earlier in this chapter. Because of their slow but steady conver-
gence, relaxation methods should probably be reserved for use with particularly
difficult problems which cannot be handled effectively by other means.
Jelinek et al. (1973a) discuss the application of relaxation methods to multistage
multicomponent separations, including such questions as forward- vs. backward-
difference forms, optimal values of the relaxation factor, forcing and extrapolation
procedures for accelerating convergence, and use of second-order difference equa-
tions. Relaxation methods can be used for converging all the different types of check
functions in a problem, or they can be used for one or more of the classes of check
functions, e.g., the component mass balances, while some other approach is used for
converging the other functions.
The usual approach has been to apply relaxation separately and successively to
the equations of different types. This implies a BP pairing of variables for distillation
problems (Ball, 1961; Jelinek et al., 1973a) and an SR pairing for absorber problems
(Bourne et al., 1974). However, the added stability of the relaxation method appears
to make these pairings stable and convergent for wider ranges of problems than has
been encountered for the paired multivariate Newton convergence schemes. Even so.
for complex problems it would probably be desirable to take cross effects into
account. Hanson et al. (1962) present a method of solving the enthalpy balances by
relaxation that allows for the effects upon both stage temperatures and interstage
flows. Seader (1978) has suggested writing the relaxation equations for A/, p/Ar as
the component mass balances [Eqs. (10-2)], for At1, p/Ar as the summation equations
in a form involving K}. p[i.e., Eqs. (10-37)], and for ATp/Af as the enthalpy balances
[Eqs. (10-3)]. Total flows would be replaced by the sums of individual-component
flows. The resultant equations should then be amenable to simultaneous solution,
using the block-tridiagonal-matrix approach.
COMPARISON OF CONVERGENCE CHARACTERISTICS;
COMBINATIONS OF METHODS
The various multivariate Newton convergence schemes are second order (see,
Appendix A) and thereby converge at an accelerated rate as the solution is
approached. The other methods described so far do not converge as rapidly in the
vicinity of the solution but compensate for this by requiring less calculation per
iteration. Relaxation methods can move toward the ultimate solution at a rate com-
parable to or better than other methods during the first few iterations but converge
much more slowly than other methods as the ultimate solution is approached. Pairing
of convergence variables and check functions in any method serves to reduce the
calculation per iteration but requires more iterations to the extent that the neglected
cross-term interactions are significant. For the paired arrangements (BP and SR)
nesting the loops in the sequential scheme tends to increase the number of iterations
of the inner loop required but to decrease the number of iterations of the outer
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 491
loop in comparison to the paired-simultaneous scheme. No general statement about
relative speeds of convergence can be made.
Stability is the ability of a convergence method to approach the ultimate solution
in a monotonic fashion, without either oscillations or divergence. Relaxation is the
most stable of the methods which have been described. The Newton methods are
highly stable as the solution is approached and are usually satisfactorily stable from
the start, but they can be divergent for a poor estimate of initial conditions. The
Broyden (1965) procedure of searching for a fraction of the indicated changes which
serves to minimize the sum of the squares of the discrepancy functions makes for a
much more stable solution with the Newton methods. Pairing of convergence var-
iables and check functions must be done so as to relate the variables and functions
which have the strongest cause-and-effect relationships; otherwise stability is
severely impaired. There appear to be no general statements regarding the relative
stabilities of the sequential and simultaneous schemes with pairing of variables and
check functions.
For highly nonlinear and complex problems an effective combination is to use
relaxation for the first several iterations and to use a multivariate SC Newton
successive-approximation method thereafter. This combination gains the greater
stability of the relaxation method for the earlier iterations, where the Newton
methods can be unstable, and the greater convergence rate of the Newton methods
for the later iterations, where the relaxation methods converge very slowly.
DESIGN PROBLEMS
The discussion so far of successive-approximation and relaxation methods has
assumed that the number of stages and the feed location are known. This corre-
sponds to the specifications in an operating problem but not to those in a design
problem. In a design problem the specifications of total stages and some other
variable, e.g., reboiler boil-up rate, are replaced by specifications of two separation
variables for distillation. In addition, the overhead reflux rate is often set at some
multiple of the minimum reflux for the specified separation, and the feed location is
usually set by some optimization criterion. Solution of such design problems by
successive-approximation and relaxation methods is not straightforward since the
number of stages and the feed location are not known a priori.
One approach for design problems is to solve a number of operating problems
with different specifications and interpolate between the results. This can be a lengthy
procedure, however.
Ricker and Grens (1974) describe a design successive-approximation (DSA)
procedure, in which the column configuration for a multicomponent distillation
design problem is changed continually to meet specifications during a successive-
approximation solution. The procedure, shown schematically in Fig. 10-10, com-
bines modification of the column configuration with the Naphtali-Sandholm full
multivariate SC Newton successive-approximation convergence procedure,
described earlier. The design problem is defined through all feed variables, column
pressure, recovery fractions of two key components, the reflux ratio being some set
492 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Estimate Tf ,
'J.P.I+ l .and ",.,,
Adjusl .V^and
Estimate changes
K + \s and A'fl/
in
.V
END
Figure 10-10 DSA approach for solving a design distillation problem using the full multivariate Newton
successive-approximation method. I Adapted from Ricker and Grens, 1974. p. 242: used by permission.)
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 493
multiple of the minimum, and a feed-stage selection criterion based upon the ratio of
the key components in the feed-stage liquid being the same as in the liquid portion of
the feed (see below).
As an inner loop, the specifications of key-component ratio on the feed stage and
of reflux ratio are exchanged for estimated values of the numbers of stages in the
rectifying and stripping sections. This allows iterations by the SC Newton multivar-
iate successive-approximation method to be made. The specifications of the recovery
fractions of the two key components are retained and still produce the efficient
block-tridiagonal matrix form for the successive-approximation iterations. A key
point is that the successive-approximation iterations in this inner loop are converged
to only a very loose tolerance, corresponding to a nonclosure of 5 percent or less in
the summation equations; this typically takes only one or a very few iterations.
Before additional successive-approximation iterations the column configuration
is changed to satisfy the design specifications better. The discrepancies in the key-
component ratio in the feed-stage liquid and in the reflux ratio (as a percent of
minimum) are used to determine new values of NR and Ns, the numbers of stages in
the rectifying and stripping sections. Here it is possible to decouple the effects of the
variables by estimating NR + Ns and NR/NS separately, as follows:
1. The total stage requirement Ns + NR reflects primarily the reflux ratio for the fixed key-
component recovery fractions. The total stage requirement is relatively independent of the
feed location as long as the feed is not badly misplaced. The indicated change in Ns + NR is
obtained from the difference between the calculated and specified reflux rates through a
linearization of the Erbar-Maddox correlation (Fig. 9-2).
2. The ratio of stages in the two sections NR /Ns governs primarily the ratio of the key
components in the liquid on the feed stage. That ratio is insensitive to the reflux rate. The
new ratio NK !NS is calculated from a secant-method convergence based upon the relation-
ship between the number of stages in either section and the change in the key-component
ratio over that section, as given by the Fenske equation (9-24).
The next step is to estimate new temperature and component-flow profiles for
the altered column configuration, so as to preserve as much as possible the amount of
convergence obtained in previous iterations of the inner successive-approximation
loop. This involves scaling the individual-component flows in proportion to the
changed reflux and allowing for the change in the number of stages in a section, as
well as scaling the temperatures in the middle portion of the column and holding
temperatures unchanged near the ends of either section.
These three basic steps are repeated until the indicated changes in the numbers of
stages are less than 1, at which point the successive-approximation solution is
repeated until a tighter convergence is obtained, the numbers of stages being checked
during this procedure to determine that they do not change.
For solutions of six varied distillation problems, Ricker and Grens report that
this procedure took an amount of computer time ranging from 1.2 to 2.6 times that
required for a single solution of the equivalent operating problem. This amount of
time is considerably less than would be required for a procedure of converging the
answers to a number of different operating problems and interpolating between the
results to derive the solution to a design problem.
494 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Optimal Feed-Stage Location
For a design problem, the optimal feed-stage location would usually be that which
requires the least reflux for a given number of stages to create a given separation of
the keys or that which requires the least stages for a given reflux flow to accomplish a
given separation. Such a criterion leads to a search which would typically require a
substantial number of problem solutions for different specifications in order to sur-
round the best configuration. It is obviously desirable to establish more efficient ways
of determining the optimum feed location.
The simplest and most commonly used rule of thumb for feed location is that the
ratio of key-component mole fractions in the liquid on the feed stage should be as
close as possible to the ratio of key-component mole fractions in the liquid portion of
the feed, flashed if necessary to tower pressure in a distillation. This is one way of
extending the known result for binary systems and is the criterion used in the DSA
procedure for distillation design problems, discussed above. Another way of extend-
ing the binary result is to say that the ratio of the key-component mole fractions in
the feed-stage liquid should be the same as that corresponding to the intersection of
the operating lines based on total flows, given by Eq. (8-109). This was the policy
followed for the approximate solution of the Underwood equation in Chap. 8.
Hanson and Newman (1977) have used the Underwood equations for calculation
of optimal feed locations in numerous distillations assuming constant relative volatil-
ities and constant molal overflow. They present several general conclusions regard-
ing the optimal feed location:
1. Although the two rules of thumb work very well for many cases, there are frequently cases
for which they do not work well. There are even instances where a separation is feasible
with a suitable feed location but becomes infeasible at feed locations given by the rules of
thumb. The most substantial deviations from the rules of thumb tend to occur at very low
multiples of the minimum reflux ratio, which are becoming more characteristic in column
design.
2. Light nonkeys tend to raise the optimum ratio of light key to heavy key on the feed stage,
while heavy nonkeys tend to lower it. As a corollary, greater deviations from the rules of
thumb occur when there is a large preponderance of light nonkeys over heavy nonkeys, or
vice versa, and when the amount of nonkeys rivals or exceeds the amount of the keys in the
feed.
3. Nonkeys very close to, or very removed from, the keys in volatility have less effect in
shifting the optimum ratio of the keys away from the rules of thumb than nonkeys
moderately removed from the keys.
4. The ratio of the keys in the liquid portion of the feed tends to work better for systems with a
preponderance of light nonkeys, while the ratio given by the operating-line intersection
tends to work better for systems with a preponderance of heavy nonkeys.
Some of the ways suggested for improving the two simple rules of thumb are the
following:
1. In stage-to-stage calculations, one can test for the most desirable feed location at various
stages during the calculation, using maximum enrichment of the keys as the criterion for
feed introduction. This was the policy followed in Example 10-1. However, stage-to-stage
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 495
calculations are effectively limited to systems containing either no light nonkeys or no
heavy nonkeys.
2. Robinson and Gilliland (1950) developed equations to allow for the effects of light and
heavy nonkeys on the optimum ratio of key components in an approximate fashion. They
are complicated to use and can still lead to nonoptimal feed locations.
3. Hanson and Newman (1977) suggest carrying out an Underwood solution which precisely
determines the optimal feed location as a first step. Since the Underwood solution is based
upon approximations of constant relative volatility and constant molal overflow and is not
able to incorporate Murphree efficiencies, it does not give the true stage requirement;
however, it should be effective for approaching the optimal feed location in terms of the
ratio of the keys, NR/NS, or some other parameter.
4. Tsubaki and Hiraiwa (1971) recommend equating the ratio of the key components in the
feed-stage liquid to that at minimum reflux. They provide a method for obtaining the ratio
of the keys on the feed stage at minimum reflux through an extension of the Underwood
Feed-stage number
x 16
o 21 (best)
A 25
0.1 -
0.01 -
0.001 Li
15 20
Stage number
25
30 34
Figure 10-11 Effect of feed location on stage-to-stage enrichment of the keys in a hydrocarbon distillation.
< Adapted from Maas, 1973, p. 97; used by permission.)
496 SEPARATION PROCESSES
equations. This approach thereby assumes constant relative volatility and constant molal
overflow between the zones of constant composition, as in the Underwood equations for
determining minimum reflux. It can be expected to work well for systems operating at low
multiples of minimum reflux.
5. Maas (1973) observed that attainment of the optimal feed location can be related empir-
ically to the shape of a plot of XLK- P/XHK. â vs. stage number in the vicinity of the feed. An
example presented by Maas of a multicomponent hydrocarbon fractionator, where n-
butane and isopentane are the keys, is shown in Fig. 10-11. As discussed in Chap. 7, the
behavior of nonkeys near the feed can make the keys undergo reverse fractionation, the
enrichment of the keys actually becoming less from stage to stage upward. This behavior is
particularly pronounced close to minimum reflux. Misplacement of the feed increases the
amount of this reverse fractionation. As shown in Fig. 10-11, too high a feed causes much
reverse fractionation below the feed, and too low a feed produces much reverse fractiona-
tion above the feed. To allow for these effects, the empirical criterion put forward by Maas
is that the feed should be moved in the direction in which [d \n(xLK ,JxHK p)/dN] is least
(most negative) until a feed location is found which produces composition profiles where
[d ln(xLK- p/xHK p)/dN] is most nearly equal on both sides of the feed stage.
The empirical criterion proposed by Maas is physically reasonable and appears
to account for the observed effects of nonkeys. It should also be very easy to imple-
ment in the DSA method for design problems.
INITIAL VALUES
Successive-approximation and relaxation methods require that initial estimates be
made of stage temperatures, interstage flows, and/or stage compositions. These esti-
mates are important in that they determine the amount of change required to achieve
convergence and can also produce initial instability in the multivariate Newton
convergence methods.
The simplest method of generating initial values would be to set all temperatures
at some intermediate value and to set all flows by some criterion such as constant
molal overflow. A better approach is to take the temperature and flow profiles to be
linear between conditions known or estimated for the end stages, e.g., a linear trend
between the dew or bubble point of the distillate and the bubble point of the bottoms
in distillation. Such estimates are usually good enough but can still be well removed
from the ultimate converged values.
Ricker and Grens (1974) point out that an approximate stage-to-stage solution
can be an effective way of initializing temperatures, flows, and compositions for a full
multivariate SC Newton convergence method. The approximate stage-to-stage
method assumes that all nonkeys are nondistributing and then starts at either end.
calculating onward to the feed stage and ignoring the mismatch of nonkey concentra-
tions at the feed stage.
A few iterations of a relaxation method can also be a very effective way of
initializing a successive-approximation calculation as well as accelerating and stabi-
lizing the overall convergence.
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 497
APPLICATIONS TO SPECIFIC SEPARATION PROCESSES
Distillation
For distillation involving strongly nonideal mixtures the full multivariate Newton
SC successive-approximation approach, as developed by Naphtali and Sandholm
and Ricker and Grens, among others, appears to combine stability and computa-
tional speed in the best way. This includes cases of azeotropic and extractive distilla-
tion, except for design problems where light nonkeys or heavy nonkeys are entirely
absent, so that a stage-to-stage method can be used reliably. For very strong nonideal-
ities and/or particularly poor initial estimates the full multivariate Newton method
can present problems of initial stability; in that case an effective combination is to
use a relaxation method for the early iterations, followed by the successive-
approximation method.
For distillation with ideal or only mildly nonideal solutions, the multivariate
Newton convergence of stage temperatures and total interstage flows (2N variables),
as implemented by Tomich (1970), is effective for handling feed mixtures with any
sort of volatility characteristics. This method should be faster than the full multivar-
iate SC Newton method because of the computational efficiency of the Thomas
solution of the tridiagonal matrix. However, when Murphree efficiencies are to be
incorporated, it is probably best to return to the full multivariate Newton method
since the benefit of the tridiagonal matrix is lost.
For distillations that do not involve feeds with very wide boiling ranges or
dumbbell characteristics, pairing the convergence variables and check functions in
the BP arrangement can further accelerate the computation.
Seppala and Luus (1972) report computation times for 16 different combinations
of convergence procedures for 9 different distillation operating problems involving
relatively ideal solutions. Their results show that pairing in the BP arrangement does
serve to accelerate convergence (consuming an average of about 73 percent as much
time for the examples tested). They also show that the direct-substitution method
with the 9 forcing factor and the Newman method based upon multivariate Newton
convergence are about equally effective for the temperature loop in the BP pairing
and that the technique of using lesser corrections to the individual-component flows
for the stages nearer to the feed is effective in accelerating the 9 method of conver-
gence for the temperature loop. For their examples they find little difference between
using the approach of Eq. (10-38) and the constant-composition approach for con-
verging the flow-enthalpy loop in the BP arrangement; they also find little difference
between using and not using the 0-based corrections to the individual-component
flows in the direct-substitution approach for the temperature loop. These two results
suggest that it is still advantageous to use the 9 corrections and the constant-
composition method for enthalpy convergence to handle cases for which they are
most needed.
Seppala and Luus found that nesting the loops led to less computation time than
the paired-simultaneous approach for the BP pairing in their examples. However
Ajlan (1975) compared computation times for the six distillation problems defined by
Ricker and Grens (1974), with operating specifications, and found the paired-
498 SEPARATION PROCESSES
simultaneous approach to be faster than nested loops; no general statement regard-
ing the advantage or disadvantage of nesting in the paired arrangement appears to be
possible. Ajlan also found that the full multivariate Newton approach was at least as
fast as paired approaches for problems with few stages and components but that the
paired arrangements became more rapid as the numbers of stages and components
grew, leading to very large matrices of partial derivatives. Boston and Sullivan (1974)
studied 23 distillation problems without strong nonidealities and found that pairing
and redefinition of the convergence variables and check functions to minimize sensi-
tivities resulted in much faster solutions than were achievable with the Tomich 2N
multivariate Newton method.
Block and Hegner (1976) considered distillations that are relatively close-boiling
but contain sufficient nonideality to result in two liquid phases on some stages. They
found that a BP pairing arrangement with a block-tridiagonal-matrix solution of the
component mass balances and equilibrium equations was effective.
Relaxation methods are hardly ever needed for distillation calculations, but
Jelinek and Hlavacek (1976) show that they are effective for calculating distillations
involving kinetically limited chemical reactions on the plates.
Holland and Kuk (1975), Hess and Holland (1976), and Kubicek et al. (1974)
discuss efficient ways of obtaining solutions for distillations with the same column
configuration and the same feeds at a number of different operating conditions.
Absorption and Stripping
Computations of simple absorbers and strippers without strong nonidealities are
handled well and are converged rapidly by means of the SR pairing of the 2N
variables for stage temperatures and total flows. Holland (1975) and Holland et al.
(1975) demonstrate this for a number of different absorption calculations involving
hydrocarbons. The multivariate Newton method described by Sujata, and the single-
and multi-0 methods described by Holland are all rapid for the flows loop in the SR
pairing for these examples. In a number of cases the single-0 method is significantly
faster.
Reboiled absorbers and some absorbers and strippers handling close-boiling
mixtures combine the characteristics of simple absorbers with those of distillation. In
such cases it is not advisable to pair the convergence variables and check functions.
Instead, if the solutions are not strongly nonideal and Murphree efficiencies are not
to be accounted for, the Tomich approach using multivariate Newton convergence of
the 2N temperature and total-flow variables is more reliable and should not take
substantially longer.
Absorbers and strippers involving strong solution nonidealities (such as chemi-
cal absorbers) and/or taking Murphree efficiencies into account should best be cal-
culated by the full multivariate SC Newton successive-approximation method unless
the problem has design specifications which permit stage-to-stage methods to be
used reliably.
As noted in Chap. 7, an internal temperature maximum is a common character-
istic of absorbers and can be very important in calculating their performances.
Bourne et al. (1974) have demonstrated that relaxation methods of computation
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 499
predict and handle the temperature profile effectively. However, the other methods
described appear to handle this phenomenon well, too, and it does not seem useful,
except in unusual cases, to resort to the much slower relaxation methods.
Extraction
Multistage multicomponent solvent-extraction problems have several distinguishing
characteristics:
1. Since there is usually no important latent heat of phase change between liquid phases,
temperature and enthalpy-balance effects tend not to be important. Thus, in effect, the SR
pairing of total flows as convergence variables with summation equations as check func-
tions is already made by the physical situation, no temperature-enthalpy balance conver-
gence generally being needed. Since extractors are often staged as discrete units, e.g.,
mixer-settlers, stage temperatures are sometimes controlled at different values as indepen-
dent variables, as in Example 10-3.
2. Extraction processes of necessity involve highly nonideal solutions, since it is the nonideal-
ity that generates the separation factor between components [Eq. (1-16)]. Computational
methods must allow for these strong nonidealities.
3. Accurate values of activity coefficients are needed for generating separation factors and
phase-miscibility relationships. Approaches such as the Margules, NRTL, UNIQUAC, and
UNIFAC equations (Reid et al., 1977) can in principle be used to generate and correlate
activity coefficients, but the lack of underlying data and approximations in these methods
can cause significant errors. Fredunslund et al. (1977a) note that the UNIFAC group-
contribution method is usually not suitable for extraction calculations for this reason,
although it can predict phase splitting well enough to handle most problems of heterogen-
eous azeotropic distillation.
Four options exist for handling the strong nonideality in extraction systems:
1. Activity coefficients can be obtained from the compositions generated in the previous
iteration. This is sometimes called the composition-lag approach. It slows convergence and is
probably suitable only where activity coefficients for one component show only a mild
dependence upon concentrations of that component and others in the system, e.g., for
relatively dilute systems.
2. Activity coefficients can be converged as functions of phase compositions in a separate,
nested loop. This consumes additional computing time.
3. Compositions and activity coefficients can be converged simultaneously with total flows in
a full multivariate SC Newton method.
4. Relaxation methods can be used.
The SR pairing with solution of Eqs. (10-13) as a tridiagonal matrix and with
direct substitution for convergence of the total flows was used by Friday and Smith
(1964). Holland (1975) outlines the use of the single-0 and multi-fl forcing-function
methods instead of direct substitution for converging the total flows. In order to
allow solution of Eqs. (10-13) as a tridiagonal matrix, he generated composition-lag
approaches for both methods, as well as a nested-loop approach for converging
activity coefficients with the multi-0 method. Tierney and Bruno (1967) presented an
500 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Af-variable Newton method for converging the flows in such an arrangement, with
activity coefficients determined by composition lag. Bouvard (1974) found that the
composition-lag approach could be accelerated by performing a single-stage equili-
bration calculation for each stage to obtain equilibrium products from the indicated
entering feeds obtained in the ith iteration and then basing the activity coefficients for
the (/ + l)th iteration on these equilibrium-product compositions. This procedure
ensures that the activity coefficients will be generated from thermodynamically
saturated stream compositions.
A full multivariate SC Newton approach for extraction was first presented by
Roche (1969). Bouvard (1974) extended the method to design problems in a way
similar to the approach of Ricker and Grens (1974) for distillation.
A relaxation procedure was developed for extraction processes by Hanson et al.
(1962, method II). In it, the relaxation calculations are carried out as successive
single-stage equilibration calculations, using the old component flows for the extract
phase and the new component flows for the raffinate phase proceeding in the direc-
tion of raffinate flow and then using the old component flows for the raffinate phase
and the new ones for the extract phase proceeding in the direction of the extract flow,
etc. Jelinek and Hlavacek (1976) considered improvements in the relaxation
approach and investigated the effects of changes in the relaxation factor. Bouvard
(1974) investigated combining relaxation for initial iterations with the full multivar-
iate SC Newton method for later iterations and found the combination to be highly
stable and rapidly convergent for a variety of problems. Bouvard also found that
special formulations of the end stage equations are necessary to handle extract reflux
in both relaxation and SC approaches.
Until recently, nearly all tests of computational methods for extraction were
made with the problem presented by Hanson et al. (1962) and described in Chap. 7.
This problem is inherently quite stable compared with other extraction problems
because the dual-solvent type of process tends to cause solutes to prefer one phase
strongly over the other. More severe problems are presented by refluxed extractions
and/or those where certain components have K} V/L (or the equivalent) near unity or
even above and below unity in different portions of a cascade. There is a more
complex effect of solution nonidealities on phase equilibria and total flows in such
cases.
Holland (1975) compared direct substitution, the single-tf method, the multi-0
method, and the N-variable Newton methodâall with the SR pairing and solution of
Eqs. (10-13) as a tridiagonal matrixâfor solving the dual-solvent problem of
Hanson et al. (1962). The multi-0 method required the fewest iterations, but it takes
longer per iteration and no comparison of actual times was presented. Jelinek and
Hlavacek (1976) found both relaxation and the SC Newton method to be effective for
four extraction problems involving dual solvents, extract reflux, and multiple feeds in
various combinations.
Bouvard (1974) compared relaxation, SC multivariate Newton, and both the
direct-substitution and multi-(J SR methods for six extraction problems, covering
dual-solvent, single-section, and refluxed extractions. He also investigated the use of
several iterations of relaxation as an initial method for the other three approaches.
The multi-tf method was found to require more computing time than the direct-
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 501
substitution SR method, but both experienced divergency with refluxed extraction
problems. Presumably this was the result of components with K, V/L near unity.
Relaxation initiation was not particularly effective in hastening convergence of the
two SR approaches since their limitations are not caused by initiation problems. The
full multivariate SC Newton approach was found to be effective and generally
convergent. Use of four to seven iterations of relaxation calculations was found to
cause the SC Newton method to converge in only two or three more iterations; this
combination resulted, on the average, in total computation times which were only 63
percent as long as for the uncombined SC method and which were only an average of
31 percent longer than the times taken by the direct-substitution SR method for the
same problems.
It can be concluded that the full multivariate SC Newton method, preferably
initialized by several iterations of relaxation, is the surest and most efficient general
method for extraction problems. Some gain in computing time can be made by using
the direct-substitution SR method for problems where it is known to work well, e.g.,
most dual-solvent extractors.
PROCESS DYNAMICS; BATCH DISTILLATION
The computations considered so far in this chapter are for steady-state operation.
Dynamic or unsteady-state behavior of separation processes poses an additional
degree of complexity. Approaches to calculation of dynamic behavior of multistage
separations have been considered and reviewed by Amundsen (1966) and Holland
(1966). Two basic approaches are those of Mah et al. (1962), where the matrix
describing steady-state operation is considered to hold unchanged over a time incre-
ment, and of Sargent (1963), where the matrix elements are considered to vary
linearly over a time increment. Control loops can provide additional off-diagonal
matrix elements. Relaxation methods, as used for steady-state calculations, can pro-
vide dynamic information through the results of successive iterations.
Batch distillation is an example of a process run under unsteady-state condi-
tions. One approach to calculating batch-distillation problems is to generate a suc-
cession of steady-state solutions corresponding to various points in time; this
neglects the effects of liquid holdup. More correct approaches for computing batch
distillation have been considered by Distefano (1968), among others. Stewart et al.
(1973) discuss the effects of different design parameters upon batch distillation and
also review earlier work.
REVIEW OF GENERAL STRATEGY
The closest thing to a general-purpose, efficient calculation method that will handle
all fluid-phase multicomponent multistage separation processes is the full multivar-
iate SC Newton convergence method initialized by several iterations of a relaxation
method. The use of a good but shorter initialization method and the Broyden search
502 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Nature of problem specifications?
DESIGN
Either LNKs or HNKs
absent?
No
OPERATING
Yes
Stage-to-stage
methods
Ricker-Grens or similar method
to converge simultaneously
in operating-problem format
Full multivariate Newton
(SC) method
with initialization by
relaxation or with Broyden
search for corrections
Highly nonideal solutions
and/or Murphree efficiencies involved?
No
I.
2 N multivariate Newton convergence
with component flows from
Iridiagonal matrix
i
No
Jres
No further simplification
advisable
Most extractions;
many distillations,
incl. azeotropic
& extractive;
chemical absorbers
SR arrangement
Simple hydrocarbon
absorber/strippers;
dilute extractions;
most dual-solvent
extractions
Can temperature & flow variables be
paired independently?
No further simplification
advisable
Reboiled absorbers
and wide-boiling
distillations, both
for hydrocarbons
BP arrangement
Ordinary distillations
without strong
nonideality
Figure 10-12 Computation methods for multicomponent multistage separation processes.
EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 503
for the optimal fraction of indicated corrections with the SC Newton method should
do nearly as well. These methods are directly applicable to operating problems,
where the number of stages and feed locations are known. For design problems,
iteration on the number of stages and feed locations can be efficiently combined with
the solution for compositions, flow, and temperature profiles by methods similar to
that developed by Ricker and Grens for multicomponent distillation.
Although the general method described above is not slow, faster methods can be
used for specific problems where certain criteria are met. An outline of such
simplifications is shown in Fig. 10-12, where slanting lines denote necessary choices
and vertical lines denote optional choices leading to more rapid methods. This
diagram summarizes many of the points developed in this chapter.
Exact solutions for multistage separations will not always be desirable. For
example, poor knowledge of phase-equilibrium data, stage efficiencies, and/or feed
compositions may not warrant such precision. Although the computing time for even
the most general of the methods is small for one or a few solutions, computing time
may become excessive when a very large number of solutions is to be made, as in
optimization of the design of large chemical processes. In these cases more approxi-
mate methods can be appropriate, e.g., those based on the Gilliland or Erbar-
Maddox correlations. Group methods are useful for dilute systems and/or those with
relatively constant separation factors and molal overflows. Like the correlations,
they can also be used for initial orientation in process decisions.
AVAILABLE COMPUTER PROGRAMS
A tabulation of specific computer programs available, as of 1978, for distillation,
absorption, extraction, evaporation, and crystallization processes is given by Peter-
son et al. (1978).
REFERENCES
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504 SEPARATION PROCESSES
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Gerster, J. A. (1963): Distillation, in R. H. Perry, C. H. Chilton, and S. D. Kirkpatrick (eds.), "Chemical
Engineers' Handbook," 4th ed., sec. 13, McGraw-Hill, New York.
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Green, S. J., and R. E. Vener, (1955): Ind. Eng. Chem., 47:103.
Hader, R. N., R. D. Wallace, and R. W. McKinney (1952): Ind. Eng. Chem., 44:1508.
Hanson, D. N., J. H. Duffin, and G F. Somerville (1962): "Computation of Multistage Separation
Processes," Reinhold, New York.
, and J. S. Newman (1977): Ind. Eng. Chem. Process Des. Dev., 16:223.
Hess, F. E., and C. D. Holland (1976): Hydrocarbon Process., 55(6):125.
Hofeling, B. S., and J. D. Seader (1978): AIChE J., 24:1131.
Hoffman, E. J. (1964): "Azeotropic and Extractive Distillation," Interscience, New York.
Holland, C. D. (1963): " Multicomponent Distillation." Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. (1966): "Unsteady-State Processes with Applications to Multicomponent Distillation," Prentice-
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Huber. W. F. (1977): Hydrocarbon Process., 56(8):121.
Hutchison, H. P.. and C. F. Shewchuk (1974): Trans. Inst. Chem. Engr., 52:325.
Jelinek. J. and V. Hlavacek: (1976): Chem. Eng. Comm., 2:79.
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Maas. J. H. (1973): Chem. Eng.. Apr. 16. p. 96.
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and pp 245 249. McGraw-Hill. New York.
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EXACT METHODS FOR COMPUTING MULTICOMPONENT MULTISTAGE SEPARATIONS 505
Smith, B. D. (1963): "Design of Equilibrium Stage Processes," McGraw-Hill, New York.
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12:130.
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Tierney, J. W., and J. A. Bruno (1967): AIChE J., 13:556.
Tomich, J. F. (1970): AIChE J., 16:229.
Tsubaki, M., and H. Hiraiwa (1971): J. Chem. Eng. Jap., 4:340.
Vanek, T, V. Hlavacek, and M. Kubicek (1977): Chem. Eng. Sci., 32:839.
Varga, R. S. (1962): "Matrix Iterative Analysis," p. 194, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
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PROBLEMS
10-A, Verify that the values of lj p, i>;, and dj used in Example 10-4 are a consistent solution of the
individual-component mass-balance equations for the temperatures initially assumed.
10-B, Repeat both parts of Example 10-2 for an absorber with cooling coils on each plate and capable of
operating isothermally at 25°C.
10-C, Carry out the Thomas-method solution to obtain the values of /B ,,, i>B, and dB used in Example
10-4.
10-D2 Consider an extractive distillation of methylcyclohexane and toluene with phenol as solvent, as
discussed in Prob. 7-E. Equilibrium data are given in Fig. 7-31. If a very high fraction of the toluene in a
binary feed containing 55 mol °n methylcyclohexane and 45°,, toluene is to be recovered in a product
containing no more than 2°,, of the methylcyclohexane fed, if phenol is added well above the feed in an
amount of 6.0 mol/mol of hydrocarbon feed, and if the boil-up ratio V'/b in the reboiler is fixed at 2.5, find
the number of equilibrium stages required in the stripping section.
10-Ej Formaldehyde is manufactured commercially from methanol by the reactions
CH3OH + iO2 - HCOH + H2O and CH3OH - HCOH + H2
The reaction employs a supported silver catalyst and takes place at about 600°C. Formaldehyde and
unreacted methanol are absorbed from the reactor effluent gases into a circulating liquid stream of
methanol. formaldehyde, and water. A portion of this liquid is continuously withdrawn and fed to a
distillation column which removes methanol and provides a product solution of 37 to 45 wt "â formal-
dehyde in water. The product formaldehyde can be no more concentrated than this because it would
polymerize rapidly. It is also necessary to retain between 1 and 7 wt ",, methanol as a polymerization
inhibitor. Further process information is given by Hader et al. (1952).
Vapor-liquid equilibrium data for the ternary methanol-water-formaldehyde system at 1 atm total
pressure are shown in Fig. 10-13. The data are shown on a triangular diagram, the coordinates of which
are the weight percent of each of the components in the liquid. The curves shown are for different constant
weight percent of formaldehyde (dashed curves) and of water (solid curves) in the vapor. Thus, for
example, a liquid containing 20°,, formaldehyde, 40",, methanol, and 40",, water is in equilibrium with a
vapor containing 9",, formaldehyde. 26",, water, and (by difference) 65"0 methanol.
Suppose that an atmospheric-pressure distillation column is to be designed to produce a typical
product solution containing 37 wt "â formaldehyde. 0.8",, methanol with the remainder water. The for-
maldehyde recovery fraction in the product will be 0.990. The weight ratio of methanol to formaldehyde in
the tower feed (saturated liquid) is 0.70. and water is present in the proper proportion in the feed to give
the desired formaldehyde product dilution. The feed is saturated liquid, and constant mass overflow may
be assumed in the tower. If the overhead reflux flow is to be 1.50 times the minimum, find the number of
equilibrium stages required and indicate a desirable feed location.
506 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Water in vapor, wt pcrcenl
Formaldehyde in vapor, wt percent
C' Pure formaldehyde
Pure
water A -y
Pure
B methanol
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Methanol in liquid, wt percent
Figure 10-13 Vapor-liquid equilibria for the methanol-water-formaldehyde system. < Adapted from Green
and Vener, 1955. p. 107: used by permission.)
10-F2 Consider a distillation tower providing three equilibrium stages plus a total condenser and an
equilibrium kettle-type reboiler. The feed is a saturated vapor containing:
Mole fraction
K, at 127°C
Bcn/ene 0.20
Toluene 0.40
Xylenes 0.40
3.12
1.34
0.60
and 20 mole percent of the feed is taken as distillate. The feed is injected to the reboiler. The reflux ratio
L/d is held at 5.0, and the tower pressure is 17 lb/in2 abs. Assume the temperatures on all stages and in the
reboiler are equal to the feed dew-point temperature, which is 127°C. Values of Kt are given in the table.
Use the ((-convergence method with the BP arrangement to accomplish one iteration toward a solution for
stage compositions and predict a new temperature profile which could be used for a second iteration.
Constant molal overflow may be assumed. Vapor-pressure data can be taken from Perry's " Handbook."
10-G2 Repeat the solution to Example 10-3 for triolein if the temperature profile is exactly reversed.
Account physically for the changes in the calculated recovery fraction.
10-H, Suggest the most efficient calculation method for part (1, JA is related to NA and Na through
^A = NA-CA(^ANA + FBNB) (11-7)
Combining Eqs. (11-2) and (11-7) leads to another expression for NA in terms of the
diffusivity:
NA = -DAB VcA + cA(FANA + VBNK) (11-8)
It can be shown (Lightfoot and Cussler, 1965) that Eqs. (11-1) and (11-2) [and
Eqs. (11-5) and (11-8)] are identical for systems at constant temperature and pres-
sure; also Z)AB used in Eqs. (11-1) and (11-5) is equal to DAB used in Eqs. (11-2) and
(11-8). For an ideal gas it can readily be seen that the equations are identical under
those conditions, since c V.\-A = VcA, r* = v*, and FA= FB= 1/c.
Equation (11-1) is generally used along with the assumption that c is indepen-
dent of composition; this is a good assumption for gas mixtures at low and moderate
pjessures. Equation (11-2) is generally used along with the assumption that PAand
KBare independent of composition but without requiring that c be constant. This is a
better idealization for most liquid mixtures.
Equations (11-1), (11-2), (11-5), and (11-8) are various forms of Pick's law for
diffusion. There is a direct parallel in form between Eqs. (11-1) and (11-2) and
Newton's law for viscous flow and Fourier's law for heat conduction if J? or JX is
made analogous to the shear stress T and the heat flux q. if £>AB is made analogous to
the kinematic viscosity nip and the thermal diffusivity k/pCp, and if CA is made
analogous to mass velocity pu and the thermal energy pCp T (Bird et al., 1960). Here
u is viscosity, p is density, k is thermal conductivity, Cp is heat capacity, u is flow
velocity, and T is temperature.
In the Pick's law expressions for fluxes with reference to stationary coordinates
[Eqs. (11-5) and (11-8)] the right-hand side is the sum of two terms. The first, involv-
ing £>AB, is sometimes called the diffusive flux, and the second, involving the sum of
the fluxes, is sometimes called the connective flux. When the convective flux is negli-
gible, there is a direct parallel between Fick's law and Newton's and Fourier's laws
written for stationary coordinates, but when the convective flux is important, the
analogy is less direct.
An example of the distinction between the two terms and the importance of each
is shown in Fig. 11-1, which represents the transport processes occurring near the
membrane in a reverse-osmosis process for desalination of salt water. Here pressure
is applied to force water through the membrane. Since the membrane is highly
selective for water over salt, the salt does not pass through. Salt must thereby build
up in concentration adjacent to the membrane surface csi to a value larger than the
salt concentration in bulk solution CSL . If A is salt and the membrane is completely
selective, NA = 0. If the positive direction of distance : is taken to be to the left, as
shown in Fig. 11-1, then NB, the flux of water across the membrane, will be negative,
making the second (convective) term on the right-hand side of Eq. (11-8) negative.
On the other hand, the first (diffusive) term will be positive, since VcA ( = dc*/d:) is
negative. Also this first term will be equal to the second term in absolute magnitude if
NA is to be zero and there are no additional transport effects. Salt is brought to the
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 511
y
Salt water
Salt
Membrane
Purified water
Water
Figure 11-1 Mass-transfer processes occur-
ring during reverse osmosis of salt water.
membrane by convection with the permeating water but returns to the bulk solution
by diffusion along the resulting concentration gradient. The diffusive and convective
fluxes are exactly equal and opposite in sign at all values of z.
For systems containing more than two components, the diffusion equations
become more complex. Multicomponent diffusion is reviewed by Cussler (1976),
among others. An important special case is that where all components except one are
dilute; it is then possible to use the binary equations to obtain the flux of any one of
the minor components, the major component being taken as component B.
Prediction of Diffusivities
Gases The kinetic theory of gases, coupled with the Lennard-Jones intermolecular
potential, leads to the following equation for £>AB in binary gas mixtures at low and
moderate pressures (Hirschfelder et al., 1964):
1.882 x
m2/s
(11-9)
where T = temperature, K
M, = molecular weight of component i, g/mol
P = total pressure, Pa
°AB = collision diameter, m
QD = diffusion collision integral, dimensionless
QD is a function of kT/c^B, where fAB is a measure of the relative strength of inter-
molecular attraction. This function is shown graphically in Fig. 11-2 and is tabulated
512 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Figure 11-2 Diffusion collision integral as a function of A / . ,â.
by Bird et al. (1960, app. B)and Sherwood et al. (1975), among others. CTAB and
are usually obtained from pure-component parameters by the mixing rules
AB; this is known as the Knudsen regime. Offsetting
these two factors can be added transport within an adsorbed layer on pore walls
(Satterfield, 1970).
Example 11-1 Calculate the diffusivity of ammonia in nitrogen at 358 K and 200 kPa and compare
with the experimental value of 1.66 x 10"5 m2/s (Sherwood et al., 1975). Values of the Lennard-
Jones parameters are:
J,,A ijk. K
Ammonia 2.900 558.3
Nitrogen 3.798 71.4
SOURCE: Data from Sherwood et
al. (1975).
SOLUTION From Eqs. (11-10) and (11-11)
is an association parameter for
the solvent, set at 2.6 for water, 1 .9 for methanol, 1 .5 for ethanol, and 1 .0 for benzene,
diethyl ether, hydrocarbons, and nonassociated solvents in general. For nonaqueous
solvents the equation of King et al. (1965) seems to work somewhat better (Reid
et al., 1977):
1612 m'/s (11-13)
where T = temperature, K
/<â = solvent viscosity, mPa-s = cP
l/A , VB = solute and solvent molal volumes
A//A . A//U = solute and solvent molar latent heats of vaporization at normal boiling
point
Experimental data for liquid-phase diffusivities have been collected by Reid et al.
(1977) and by Ertl et al. (1973), among others.
From Eqs. (11-12) and (11-13) it can be seen that DAB is independent of pressure
in liquids except at very high pressure. £>AB increases much more sharply with in-
creasing temperature in liquids than in gases; for aqueous systems near ambient
temperature the increase is about 2.6 percent per kelvin. The principal temperature-
sensitive term on the right-hand side of Eqs. (11-12) and (11-13) is ^B .
DAB from Eq. (11-12) or (11-13) should be interpreted as the diffusivity for A at
high dilution in B. It is not the same as DBA , the diffusivity of B at high dilution in A.
The effect of concentration level on liquid-phase diffusivities is complex but seems to
reflect solution nonidealities as the dominant factor (Reid et al., 1977: Sherwood
et al., 1975).
Prediction and analysis of diffusivities in electrolyte solutions involves separate
allowance for the ionic mobilities of independent ions through the Nernst-Haskell
equation, as well as consideration of the effect of concentration (Sherwood et al..
1975; Reid et al.. 1977: Newman, 1967a).
Solids Diffusivities in solids cover a wide range of values, becoming quite low for
dense and/or crystalline materials. Analysis of diffusion in solids is also made more
complicated if the solid is heterogeneous and or nonisotropic, such as wood, most
foods, composite materials, and the like.
Diffusion in polymer materials is reviewed by Crank and Park (1968) and sum-
marized by Sherwood et al. (1975). Diffusion in metals is treated by Bugakov (1971).
among others. Diffusivities in various solid materials have been compiled and dis-
cussed by Barrer (1951), Jost (1960), and Nowick and Burton (1975).
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 515
SOLUTIONS OF THE DIFFUSION EQUATION
Solutions of the diffusion equation for various geometries are given by Crank (1975)
and Barrer (1951). Solutions to the heat-conduction equation in stationary media are
given by Carslaw and Jaeger (1959). These can be applied to diffusion by direct
analogy as long as the convective term in Eq. (11-5) or (11-8) is insignificant. The
convective term will be negligible in either of two special cases:
1. NA = -NB [in Eq. (11-5)], or PANA = - VBNB [in Eq. (11-8)]. These cases are known as
equimolar and equivolume counterdiffusion, respectively, and would occur, for example, for
diffusion in a nonuniform gas mixture in a closed container.
2. A becomes very dilute in B. and /VB is either zero or very small. In this case the convective
term in either equation will be the product of two quantities (concentration of A and flux),
each of which approaches zero.
When the convective term is insignificant, Eq. (11-8) becomes
NA=-£>ABVCA (11-14)
For transient diffusion in a stagnant medium, a mass balance on a differential ele-
ment gives
^=-VJVA (11-15)
Combining Eqs. (11-14) and (11-15) gives, for constant DAB
y^ = DABV2CA (11-16)
For one-dimensional transport, Eq. (11-16) becomes
Solutions of Eqs. (11-16) and (11-17) give the fraction of the ultimate concentration
change which has occurred as a unique function of the dimensionless group £>AB f/L2,
where r is elapsed time and L is an appropriate length variable. In turn, if the
concentrations at all points are integrated to give an average concentration, this
average concentration can be related to the same group, where L is now an appro-
priate dimension of the entire medium.
Figure 11-3 shows the solutions to the transient-diffusion equation for a one-
dimensional slab, an infinite circular cylinder, and a sphere (Sherwood et al., 1975;
Carslaw and Jaeger, 1959), expressed as (CA/ - CA av)/(cA/ - CAO) vs. DAB r/L2. Here L
is the half-thickness of the slab and the radius of the cylinder and sphere. CA av is the
average concentration; CAO is the initial concentration of the medium, assumed to be
uniform; and CA/ is the concentration reached after an infinite time, assumed to be
the value at which the surface of the medium is held throughout the diffusion process.
Over much of the range the solutions form straight lines on the semilogarithmic plot.
Detailed numerical values are given by Sherwood et al. (1975) and are needed for
516 SEPARATION PROCESSES
0.002
0.01 -
Figure 11-3 Solutions or the transient-diffusion equation Tor simple shapes (constant surface concentra-
tion = CA/). (Data from Sherwood el al, 1975.>
precision at very short times. Other solutions apply for other boundary conditions
(Carslaw and Jaeger, 1959), and solutions for more complex shapes can be obtained
by superposition of the solutions for simple shapes (Sherwood et al., 1975).
Example 11-2 One of the original processes for decaffeination of coffee involved solvent extraction,
or leaching, of caffeine from whole coffee beans (Moores and Slefanucci. 1964). Beans were first
steamed to free caffeine and provide an aqueous transport medium for it inside the bean. The beans
were then contacted with a suitable organic solvent, into which the caffeine was leached.
Assume that the quantity and agitation of the solvent are sufficient to reduce the concentration
of caffeine at the bean surface to /ero at all times during the leaching. Assume also that the combina-
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 517
lion of percent moisture, voidage and tortuosity of the diffusion path inside a bean serve to reduce
the diffusivity of caffeine to 10 percent of the value in pure water. Take the temperature to be 350 K
and the beans to be equivalent to spheres with diameters of 0.60 cm. Caffeine has the structure
CH3
8 carbons
10 hydrogens
2 oxygens
4 nitrogens
8 x 14.8= 118.4
10 x 3.7 = 37.0
2 x 7.4 = 14.8
4 x 15.6= 62.4
232.6 cmVmol
(a) Calculate (he contact time with solvent required to reduce the caffeine content of a group of
beans to 3.0 percent of the initial value, (b) Would halving the average bean dimension by cutting the
beans serve to reduce the required contact time? If so. by how much? (c) Would a change of
extraction temperature alter the required contact time? If so, in what direction should the tempera-
ture be changed to reduce the required contact time? What would be the effect of a change of 10 K?
(d) What would be the directional effect on the required contact time if there were a slow rate of
solubilization of the caffeine in the beans? If cell-wall membranes within the beans presented a
significant additional resistance to mass transport?
SOLUTION The diffusivity of caffeine in water is estimated from Eq. (11-12). The molar volume of
caffeine is obtained by the group-contribution method of LeBas, using the tabulation of Sherwood
et al. (1975, p. 31):
The association parameter for water is 2.6. The viscosity of water at 350 K (77°C) is 0.38 mPa-s
(Perry and Chilton, 1973).
The value assumed to apply inside the coffee beans is then (0.1)(1.77 x 10~9) = 1.77 x 10~'° m2/s.
(a) From Fig. 11-3, for (CAO - CA..V)/(CAO - CA/) = 0.030 (97 percent removal of caffeine),
DAB t/I? f°r a sphere equals 0.305. Since the sphere radius L is ^(0.6 cm) = 0.3 cm, we have
0.3051? (0.305)(0.003)2 1.55 x 10*
' ' "if- ' T.77 x ,0^ - I-* * 'O- . - -^- - 4.3 h
(h) Halving the bean dimension would reduce L by a factor of 2. Since DABr/Z? should be the
same for 97 percent removal, f will be one-fourth as much as calculated in part (a), or 1.1 h.
(c) Changing temperature changes the diffusivity of caffeine within the beans. Higher tempera-
ture gives higher £>AB and hence a lower f for the desired DAB r/L2, corresponding to the desired degree
of removal. Increasing the temperature to 360 K would decrease HH,O from 0.38 to 0.32 mPa-s.
Hence DAB increases by a factor of
(0.38X360) =
(0.32)1350)
and the required contact time decreases by the same factor.
518 SEPARATION PROCESSES
>;.â¢/) A slow rate of solubilization would reduce the concentration of caffeine in solution inside
the beans, reducing the driving force for diffusion, slowing the diffusion process, and taking a longer
contact time. Additional resistance from the cell-wall membranes would reduce the transport rate for
a given driving force and again would lengthen the required contact time. D
MASS-TRANSFER COEFFICIENTS
Solutions of the diffusion equation often become quite complex or impossible when
mass transfer occurs in a flowing system, in a turbulent medium, and/or in a com-
plicated geometry. For this reason it is common practice to define mass-transfer
coefficients, which relate fluxes of matter to known differences in mole fraction or
concentration. These are analogous to heat-transfer coefficients, which are used to
relate heat fluxes to known temperature differences.
Dilute Solutions
As we have seen, for mass transfer in dilute solutions we can neglect the convective
terms of Eqs. (11-5) and (11-8) and consider only the terms involving DAB, as long as
Ne is not large enough in absolute magnitude to invalidate this simplification.
Furthermore, for a multicomponent system in which all components but one are
dilute, we can analyze the fluxes of each of the minor components using Eqs. (11-5)
or (11-8), DAB being the diffusivity for the binary system of that minor component
and the major component. Again, the convective terms can be neglected unless NB is
large enough to preclude this.
For situations where the convective terms can be neglected, it is universal prac-
tice to define the mass-transfer coefficient as the ratio of JVA to an appropriate
measure of the difference in composition across the region where the mass-transfer
process is occurring. For mass transfer between a bulk fluid of uniform composition
and an interface where the same fluid phase has a different composition, several
different definitions of the mass-transfer coefficient are possible:
N* = k,(yM-yM) (11-18)
NA = M*AI. - xAl.) (11-19)
NA = M/»AG - PA,-) (H-20)
NA = MCA,. - cAi) (11-21)
Here the subscript A refers to component A, the subscript / refers to the interface, the
subscript G refers to bulk gas, the subscript L refers to bulk liquid, p is partial
pressure, y and x are gas and liquid mole fractions, and c is concentration. ky. kx, kG,
and kc are alternative forms of the mass-transfer coefficient, with typical units of
mol/s-m2, mol/s-m2. mol/s-m2-Pa, and m/s [(mol/m2-s) (mol/m3)], respectively. ky
and kc would be used for gas-phase processes, and at constant total pressure
ky = /cc P. kx and kc would be used for liquid-phase processes, and at constant molar
density kx = kcc. The concentration-based mass-transfer coefficient kc is sometimes
also applied to a gas phase, in which case CA/ in Eq. (11-21) would be replaced by
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 519
CAG . Common practice is to write the driving force so as to give the mass-transfer
coefficient a positive sign; i.e., if the mass transfer were from the interface to the bulk
fluid and NA were considered positive in that direction, the Ay, A.x, Ap, and Ac terms
in Eqs. (11-18) to (11-21) would be reversed in sign.
For a few simple or idealized cases mass-transfer coefficients can be obtained
from simple theory; in most other cases they must be obtained experimentally and
are then correlated through the assistance of dimensionless groups.
Film model The film model, which originated with Nernst (1904), is based upon the
observation that the concentration of a transferring solute usually changes most
rapidly in the immediate vicinity of the interface and is relatively uniform in bulk
fluid away from the interface. For an agitated or flowing fluid near an interface the
assumption is then made that all the concentration change occurs over a thin region
immediately adjacent to the interface. This region is called the film and is considered
to be stationary and so thin that steady-state diffusion is immediately established
across it. In that case, Eq. (11-17) applied to the film becomes
^=° m-22)
which with the boundary conditions CA = CA, at ~ = 0 and CA = CAL (or CAG) at : = 6
becomes
CA = cAi; + -& (CA,. - cAl) (11-23)
Coupled with Eq. (11-14), this becomes
NA = ^(cA;.-cAi) (11-24)
if NA is taken positive toward the interface. Comparison with Eq. (11-21) gives
k< = °f (11-25)
Equation (11-25) could be used for predicting mass-transfer coefficients if 6 could
somehow be predicted a priori or if d were relatively independent of flow rates and
other conditions. Neither is true. Also, Eq. (11-25) predicts that kc varies with the first
power of DAB, which is almost never observed; this discrepancy results from the
assumption of a discontinuity in transport conditions at the outer film boundary.
Even though the film model cannot be used effectively for prediction and correla-
tion, it is useful (because of its mathematical simplicity) for predicting and analyzing
the effects of such additional complicating factors as simultaneous chemical reaction
near the interface and high solute concentrations and fluxes. It is a useful model for a
membrane, which obeys the film assumptions, and is a reasonable first approxima-
tion for highly turbulent fluids near fixed interfaces, where a thin, relatively stagnant
boundary layer can exist.
520 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Penetration and surface-renewal models For many situations it is a reasonable
assumption to postulate that a mass of fluid is exposed at an interface for an
identifiable amount of time before being swept away and remixed with bulk fluid. If
there is no gradient of velocity within this mass of fluid during the exposure, we can
analyze the mass-transfer process by following the fluid mass and solving the diffu-
sion equation for the transient-diffusion process that occurs. The resulting model
then follows the penetration of the solute concentration profile into the fluid mass,
away from the interface.
The appropriate form of the diffusion equation is Eq. (11-17), with the boundary
conditions CA = CA| at t > 0 and z = 0; CA = CA/ at t = 0 (when the fluid mass is
brought to the interface); and CA -+ cAt as z -» oo, far removed from the interface. The
solution for the concentration profile is
where erf (.x) is the error function [see discussion following Eq. (8-51)]. The mass-
transfer coefficient is obtained by applying Eqs. (11-14) and (11-21) at the interface
(z = 0), and is
" (M-27,
at time t. Notice that at t = 0, kc becomes infinite, reflecting the step change in
concentration from CA, to CAL at the interface as the exposure of the fluid mass begins.
kc given by Eq. (11-27) is known as the instantaneous mass-transfer coefficient. An
average mass-transfer coefficient over an entire exposure interval, from t = 0 to t = 0,
can also be obtained
The average coefficient for the exposure is twice the instantaneous coefficient at the
end of the exposure.
The concentration-difference driving force in Eq. (11-21) for kc defined by
Eqs. (11-27) and (11-28) is the difference between the initial bulk-liquid concentra-
tion and the interface concentration, since the bulk concentration in a semi-infinite
medium does not change as diffusion occurs.
The penetration model is applicable to a situation where (1) a fluid mass is
suddenly brought to the interface and is just as suddenly mixed back into the bulk
after time 0, (2) there is no velocity gradient within the fluid mass, and (3) the depth
of the fluid mass is sufficient to ensure that the solute concentration profile does not
penetrate far enough to reach a bounding surface or a region with turbulent trans-
port or a different velocity. Assumption 2 is usually well met by liquid in the vicinity
of a gas-liquid interface, since the viscosity of a liquid is usually much greater than
that of a gas, meaning that drag from the gas phase will create little gradient of
velocity in the liquid near the interface. In liquids diffusivities are also low enough for
the depth of penetration to be small. For example, for DAB = 1 x 10" 9 m2/s and
f = 1 s. the solute concentration will have changed 98 percent of the way from the
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 521
Liquid flow
Figure 11-4 Flow of liquid over a short solid
surface.
interfacial concentration to the bulk concentration only 100 nm away from the
interface.
One situation to which the penetration model applies well is desorption or
absorption of a volatile solute from or into a liquid flowing over a short solid surface
as a film, with the outside of the film exposed to gas. The flow pattern tends to mix
the liquid at the top and bottom of the solid wall, giving a distinct beginning and end
to the exposure of surface liquid to the gas, as shown in Fig. 11-4. The liquid velocity
is relatively uniform near the gas interface (the result of a semiparabolic profile)
because of the low drag of the gas on the liquid. Hence mass-transfer coefficients for
transfer between the gas-liquid interface and the bulk liquid can be estimated well
from Eqs. (11-27) and (11-28), t being :/rs and 9 being h/vs, where h is the fall height
and cs the surface velocity of the liquid. There is an obvious similarity between the
situation shown in Fig. 11-4 and the flow situation in an irrigated packed tower
(Fig. 4-13), where liquid flows over packing of the sort shown in Fig. 4-14 and
contacts a gas which flows in the interstices. Indeed, it has been found that kc for the
liquid phase in packed gas absorbers does vary with the liquid diffusivity to the j
power, as predicted by Eqs. (11-27) and (11-28), and that values of kc for the liquid
phase are of the magnitude predicted by Eq. (11-28) with 0 = h/vs, where /> is the
height of an individual piece of packing.
In many other situations where a liquid is exposed to a gas it is not so apparent
how to predict the value of 0 for the penetration model. An example would be a
stirred-vessel absorber where an impeller causes eddies of liquid to come up to the
522 SEPARATION PROCESSES
surface, stay for a time, and then be mixed back into the bulk liquid. As one approach
to such situations, Danckwerts (1951) has proffered a model based upon random
surface renewal, leading to
kc=(ZW)1/2 (11-29)
where s is the fraction of the surface renewed by fluid masses from the bulk per unit
time. There does not appear to be a good way of correlating s with observable flow
properties, however.
Example 11-3 Show that the penetration model also predicts the behavior of the curves in Fig. 11-3
for low values of Z)AB t/l3.
Solution At short times the concentration profiles for transient diffusion into a slab, cylinder, or
sphere will have penetrated only a short distance and hence should be describable by the equations
for transient diffusion into a semi-infinite medium, on which Eqs. (11-27) and (11-28) are based. The
average concentration would come from a mass balance relating the flux across the surface to the
capacity of the object:
f^ir-'M-Mfou-CA.) (n-30)
at
where V is the volume and A the surface area of the object. The driving force for the mass-transfer
coefficient is taken as cA, - cA0, since the penetration model postulates a semi-infinite medium where
ca 's cao far from the surface.
Integrating Eq. (11-30) with the boundary condition cA = cA0 at t = 0 leads to
''* ' ~C⢠= A (kAt
CAI CAO ' ' _
Substituting Eq. (11-27) and integrating and then subtracting each side from 1 yields
^â i-2-j^r (11-3D
For the slab A/V = \/L; for the infinite cylinder A/V - 2/L; and for the sphere A/V = 3/L, recalling
that L is the half thickness for the slab and the radius for the cylinder and sphere. The left-hand side
Table 11-1 Values of (cAav - cM)/(cM - cM) from Fig. 11-3
compared with those computed from Eq. (11-31)
Fig. 11-3
Eq. (11-31)
1
D^t/L1
Slab
Cyl.
Sphere
Slab
Cyl.
Sphere
0.005
0.922
0.843
0.774
0.920
0.840
0.761
0.01
0.890
0.784
0.690
0.887
0.774
0.661
0.02
0.839
0.698
0.579
0.840
0.681
0.521
0.04
0.773
0.558
0.774
0.549
0.06
0.725
0.512
0.724
0.447
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 523
of Eq. (1 1-31 ) is the same as the vertical coordinate of Fig. 11-3, and the second term of the right-
hand side is a multiple of the \ power of the horizontal coordinate, being 2n,\/n times (DABf X2)1 2,
where n = 1,2. and 3 for the slab, cylinder, and sphere, respectively.
From Table 11-1 it can be seen that the agreement with the penetration model is excellent at the
shortest times for all three geometries. For the slab model the penetration approximation remains
very good for values of the concentration factor down to 0.40 (representing 60 percent equilibration
with the surface). For the cylinder the penetration approximation deviates significantly below a
higher value of the concentration factor, and for the sphere the critical value of the concentration
factor becomes higher yet. This trend from one geometry to another results because the penetration
model considers diffusion into a unidirectional medium. This assumption is obeyed for the slab, but
for the cylinder and sphere the cross section for diffusion becomes less as one proceeds inward from
the surface, causing less mass transfer to occur than is predicted by the unidirectional penetration
model. D
Diffusion into a stagnant medium from the surface of a sphere When molecular
diffusion occurs from the surface of a sphere of constant size into a surrounding
stagnant medium of infinite extent, a steady-state situation is eventually set up be-
cause of the increasing cross section proceeding away from the sphere. To solve for
the rate of diffusion it is necessary to put Eq. (11-16) into spherical coordinates and
set dci/dt = 0. The solution (Sherwood et al., 1975, p. 215) is
(CA.--CAO) (11-32)
.
'o
where r0 is the radius of the sphere. Combining Eqs. (11-21) and (11-32) gives
ro «o
if d0 is the sphere diameter. For short times, before this steady state is established, it
can be shown that the flux is the sum of the steady-state value and a transient term
(Sherwood et al., 1975, p. 70):
leading to
The dimensionless group kc d0 /DAB is known as the Sherwood number (Sh); hence the
solution corresponds to
Sh = 2 + (« Fo)- 1/2 (11-36)
where the Fourier number Fo is DABt/d*.
If flow, turbulence, or other factors are also present, kc can be expected to be
higher than given by Eq. (11-35). However, Eq. (11-35) leads to very high mass-
transfer coefficients for very small spheres because of the presence of the sphere
radius in the denominator. Because of this, the molecular-diffusion terms dominate
for smaller spheres, and below some critical radius Eq. (11-35) will describe the mass
transfer, even in the presence of flow and/or turbulence.
524 SEPARATION PROCESSES
The analysis leading to Eq. (11-35) postulates an unchanging sphere diameter. If
the diameter changes slowly, it is permissible to apply Eq. (11-35) for kc as a quasi-
steady-state approximation. However, for rapid changes in the sphere diameter, e.g.,
many cases of bubble growth, it is necessary to take account of the effect of the
surface motion.
Dimensionless groups We have already seen that the mass-transfer coefficient kc can
be combined with DAB and a length variable into a dimensionless group known as the
Sherwood number. The Sherwood group can also be expressed in terms of the other
mass-transfer coefficients defined in Eqs. (11-18) to (11-20):
£>AB cDAB cDAB DAB
The ideal-gas law has been invoked in writing the form involving kc. The length
variable is designated as L in each case.
For systems of mass transfer to and from interfaces in flowing systems we can
expect the mass-transfer coefficient to be influenced by the fluid mainstream velocity
M, the fluid density p, the viscosity u. the diffusivity DAB, and one or more character-
istic lengths L. If the coefficient varies locally, it will also be influenced by a position
variable .v. Dimensional analysis applied to this collection of variables leads to the
Sherwood group and three other independent dimensionless groups:
Lup u , \
-, âf:â, and -
The first of these is the Reynolds number Re (ratio of inertial fluid forces to viscous
forces), and the second is the Schmidt number Sc (ratio of viscous transport of
momentum to diffusional transport of matter). When transient phenomena are in-
volved, time enters, leading to the Fourier number DABr L2. Any additional factors
lead to additional groups: e.g., if gravitational forces are important, as in motion by-
natural convection (convection driven by naturally occurring density differences), a
new group involving g enters, typically the Rayleigh number or the Grashof number
(Bird et al., 1960, p. 645).
For gaseous mixtures, the Schmidt number is of the order of unity, but for liquid
mixtures the Schmidt number is much higher, typically of the order of 103 to 104.
For complex situations, the mass-transfer coefficient can be correlated in terms
of these variables through the functionality
Sh=/(Re. Sc. j ....) (11-38)
\ Lt f
The use of dimensionless groups reduces the number of experiments required and
makes it easier to work with the resulting functionalities.
The use of dimensionless groups also facilitates extension of heat-transfer rela-
tionships to the corresponding mass-transfer situation for dilute solutions. The
Nusselt number hL/k, where /) is the heat-transfer coefficient and k is the thermal
conductivity, converts into the Sherwood number; the Reynolds number remains the
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 525
same; and the Prandtl number Cp^i/k, where Cp is heat capacity and k is thermal
conductivity, converts into the Schmidt number. The Fourier number for heat trans-
fer is kt/pCp L2.
Laminar flow near fixed surfaces For mass transfer between a fluid in laminar flow
within a circular tube and the tube wall, the classical Graetz solution leads to the
following expression for the mass-transfer coefficient averaged over the tube-wall
surface (Eckert and Drake, 1959):
"ȣ, av"p -, *â¢(- " '" ""V";?' -W"p"F/A'JU'/K*-'AB/ /., -)g\
~r» ~ 1 T7\7\7f7j /..\/j ..,,/..\/../^T» \i2 3 \ i-jy)
£>
AB
provided the solute concentration at the tube wall is kept constant. dp is the diameter
of the tube, and .x is the length of the tube surface over which the mass-transfer
process occurs. Since the bulk concentration of solute in the fluid will change along
the tube length, it is important to identify the concentration-difference driving force
to be used with kc from this expression. In this case it is the logarithmic mean of the
inlet and outlet driving forces; i.e., if A = (CA/. - cA,)inlel and B = (CA/. - cA,)oulk., , the
appropriate value of CA/ - CA, to use in Eq. (11-21) with the value of kc from
Eq. (11-39) is (A - B)/[\n (A/B)].
Near the entry of the tube, Eq. (11-39) becomes simpler:
' (11-40)
where ,v is the distance from the tube inlet and kc av is the average kc over the distance
from .v = 0 to .v = ,\. Because of the â 5 power on distance, the local, or instantan-
eous, kc at any .v is 2/3 times the average coefficient from .v = 0 up to that position, as
can be shown by an integration similar to Eq. (11-28). This leads to a form of
Eq. (11-40) where kc replaces fcc-av and the constant is changed from 1.67 to 1.11.
Equation (11-40) is one form of the Leveque solution (Knudsen and Katz, 1958)
for mass transfer between a fixed surface and a semi-infinite fluid which flows over
the surface with a well-established linear velocity gradient near the surface and zero
velocity at the surface:
(11-41)
Here a is the slope of the linear velocity profile (a = du/dy, where y is distance from
the fixed surface). Equation (11-41) gives the local coefficient. The average coefficient
kc a, between the start of the mass-transfer process and x is f times the value given by
Eq. (11-41). changing the constant to 0.807 if/cc-av replaces kc.
For large values of L/dp (far downstream) Eq. (11-39) shows that the Sherwood
group asymptotically reaches a lower limit of 3.65, provided the logarithmic-mean
driving force is used. This particular asymptotic value of Sh is specific to the circular-
tube geometry and the boundary condition of constant wall concentration along the
tube. Limiting values of Sh for triangular passages and for flow between parallel
526 SEPARATION PROCESSES
plates, as well as for other boundary conditions, e.g.. constant wall flux rather than
constant wall concentration and/or some of the surfaces insulated or inactive for
transfer, are given by Rohsenow and Choi (1961), Groberet al. (1961), and Knudsen
and Katz (1958). The limiting value of the Sherwood number is the same as the
limiting value of the Nusselt number in these references, which consider heat transfer.
For laminar flow near the leading edge of a sharp flat plate, with flow parallel to
the plane of the plate, the use of laminar-boundary-layer theory (Schlichting, 1960;
Sherwood et al., 1975) leads to the following expression for the local kc at any
distance from the leading edge of the plate, assuming that the plate surface has
constant solute concentration:
= 0.332
DAB
Because of the â ^-power dependence of kc upon distance, the average value of kc is
twice the local, changing the constant to 0.664. The physical situation pictured here is
different from that in the Leveque model, in that Eq. (11-42) is based on a uniform
flow upstream from the plate which causes a developing (and changing) velocity
profile along the plate. Equation (11-41) is based upon a linear velocity gradient
which is already fully developed when mass transfer begins. For both Eqs. (11-41)
and (11-42) it is appropriate to use a driving force based upon the difference between
the surface concentration and the initial fluid concentration.
Equation (11-42) will also apply to a situation where the bulk flow is turbulent as
long as the boundary layer remains laminar, which will occur for up.\/n up to about
300,000.
Beek and Bakker (1961) and Byers and King (1967) have considered mass trans-
fer in situations where there is a finite surface velocity and either an established
velocity gradient or a developing boundary layer, as can occur in laminar contacting
of immiscible fluids.
Turbulent mass transfer to surfaces If pressure drop is due to skin friction rather than
form drag (Bird et al., 1960, p. 59), measurements of pressure drop can, in principle,
be converted into heat-transfer and mass-transfer coefficients through appropriate
analogies based upon Newton's, Fourier's, and Pick's laws. For turbulent systems,
especially for flow in circular tubes and over a flat surface, various efforts have been
made to produce such analogies by assuming that an eddy diffusivity for turbulent
transport is additive with the molecular diffusivity (Sherwood et al., 1975, pp.
156-171). The eddy diffusivity is assumed to vary in some specified way with distance
from a fixed or free surface across which mass transfer occurs.
Probably the most successful of the analogies is one that is entirely empirical,
based upon qualitative knowledge of the various phenomena involved. This is the
Chilton-Calburn analogy (Chilton and Colburn, 1934), which states that
JD=Jlt = - (11-43)
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 527
It \23
where ^ <1M4>
JH =
Cppu
1C u\2'3
(T) 0), no concen-
tration difference is required if A moves.
The other extreme is the sort of situation presented in connection with Fig. 11-1,
where NK was large and NA was small in a reverse-osmosis process. If CA is small, this
is a case of low solute concentration but high flux (from NB), which converts
Eqs. (11-5) and (11-8) into
NA-.xANB=-cDABV.xA (11-51)
and N* - CA FB NB = - DAB VcA (11-52)
Here it is apparent that the high flux will serve to distort the solute concentration
profile because the gradient term is now equal to a quantity on the left-hand side that
is very different from JVA in absolute magnitude. Distortion of the concentration
profile will alter the concentration gradient at the interface and thereby alter the
mass-transfer coefficient. In particular, it turns out that a high flux of mass into a
phase serves to reduce the solute concentration gradient and thereby reduce the
diffusive flux, whereas a high mass flux out of a phase has the opposite effect.
Before considering the general case, it is useful to point out again that there is
another special case where the kc values from dilute-solution relationships can be
used directly. That is the case of equal-molar or equal-volume counterdiffusion
(AfA = â 7VB or KA NA, = â VB NB) where the convective terms in Eqs. (11-5) and
(11-8), respectively, become zero. This case is often a good approximation; recall, for
example, that in distillation it is often assumed that NA = âNB in connection with
the assumption of equimolal overflow.
There are two definitions of the mass-transfer coefficient in use for the general
case where there can be high solute concentration and/or high flux. One of these (see,
for example, Sherwood, et al., 1975) retains the definitions of Eqs. (11-18) to (11-21)
making the coefficient the ratio of NA to the concentration difference. We shall call
such coefficients /cVc, /cVx, etc. The other definition, used by Bird et al. (1960,
chap. 21) defines the coefficient as the ratio of JJ or JA to the concentration differ-
530 SEPARATION PROCESSES
ence, substituting J% for NA in Eqs. (11-18) and (11-19). following Eq. (11-1), and
substituting^ for JVA in Eqs. (1 1-20) and (11-21), following Eq. (1 1-2). We shall call
such coefficients kjc, kjx, etc. These coefficients reflect the diffusive flux only and are
therefore simpler to relate to high-concentration and high-flux effects in most cases.
The definitions of the kj coefficients thereby become
NA = fc,x(.xAl. - xAt) + xAl( £ Nj) (1 1-53)
NA = kJt(cM - cAi.) + CA, £ VjN\ (1 1-54)
'
and so forth. The summations of fluxes in the second terms on the right-hand sides
extend the definition to multicomponent as well as binary systems. With the
definitions given by Eqs. (1 1-53) and (1 1-54) and similar forms, it now becomes very
important to keep track of the signs of the concentration differences and fluxes. The
convention adopted here is to make NA positive if the net flux of component A is in
the direction from the interface to the bulk.
Bird et al. (1960, chap. 21) have summarized correction factors to be used in
converting values of kx, /cf, etc., for dilute systems into values of kjx, kjc, etc., for
systems with high flux. They are derived from the film and penetration models and
the laminar-boundary-layer theory for flow over the leading edge of a flat plate. The
solutions are expressed in terms of three dimensionless groups for the analyses based
upon Eqs. (11-5) and (11-53):
^
0A = -r^ for component A (1 1-55)
(11-56)
(11-57)
Only two of these groups are independent, since by Eq. (11-53) 0A = <£A/RA.
The solutions for the various models are plotted in Figs. 11-5 and 11-6. (For the
boundary-layer model. <£A in Fig. 11-5 can be obtained as $A = 0AKA from
Fig. 11-6.) Also included is the result obtained by Clark and King (1970) for the
Leveque model with RA > 1, which is very close to the penetration solution.
The results for the laminar-boundary-layer model also depend upon the Schmidt
number (Sc = n/pDM), but the results for the film, penetration, and Leveque models
are independent of Schmidt number.
By direct analogy, these dimensionless groups and the solutions shown in
Figs. 11-5 and 11-6 can be extended to analyses based upon Eqs. (11-8) and (11-54)
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 531
"A
or
0.5
0.2
Penetration ( )
Levequc ( )
-3 -2
Figure 11-5 High-flux correction factors for mass-transfer coefficients. < Adapted from Bird et a/.. 7960.
p. 675; used by permission.)
by redefining the dimensionless groups as
(11-58)
(11-59)
Notice that 0A is greater than unity for a net flux out of the stream; this reflects
the effect of the flux in increasing the concentration gradient at the interface. Con-
532 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Penetration ( )
LevSque ( )
0.1
0.1
/?Aor
Figure 11-6 High-flux correction factors for mass-transfer coefficients. (Adaptedfrom Bird el al., 1960,
p. 675: used by permission.)
versely, 0A is less than unity for a net flux into the stream, reflecting the effect of the
flux in decreasing the interfacial concentration gradient in such a case.
No solution is presented for cases of mass transfer between an interface and a
turbulent liquid. For such a case the film-model result is the best prediction because
of the approach of a turbulent-flow situation to the conditions postulated by the film
model.
The solution for the film model is also given by simple analytical relationships
and
g*A _ !
In (R + 1)
R
(11-61)
(11-62)
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 533
For the film model the expression for /c,Vj, , felVc , etc., is also obtainable analytically
(Wilke, 1950) and is
fc«*=~ (H-63)
etc., where XA/, (VACA)/> etc., are called film factors and defined by
(l-tAXAL)-(l-fAXA,)
XA'-
where fA = £ AT/NA and f A = Z VjNjlV\N\- For the special case of N} ^ A = 0,
Jj
rA = 1 and xAf is (1 â XA)LM, where the subscript LM represents the logantnmic
mean between interface and bulk conditions. Similarly, for the special case of
^â¢Afj,j*A = 0, t^= i amj (f^cA)/ is (1 â VACA)LM- These conditions would be
expected to hold for many absorption and stripping operations, and one therefore
often sees the term y^M or P/PBM in correlations for gas-phase mass-transfer co-
efficients (fc^ and kNO) for absorbers. These refer to the reciprocal logarithmic-mean
mole fraction or partial pressure of the nontransferring component of the gas B. The
expression is unique to the film model and the case where only component A transfers
across the interface. The solutions for fcv from other models, e.g., the penetration
model (Bird et al., 1960, pp. 594-598), are much more complex.
The solutions presented in Figs. 1 1-5 and 1 1-6 are exact for binary systems and
represent good approximations in most cases in multicomponent systems. Major
exceptions occur in multicomponent systems, however. For example, for dilute com-
ponents the appropriate diffusivity to use in a correlation for kx , kc , etc., can vary
substantially and can be difficult to determine; it can even become negative in some
cases (Cussler, 1976).
Reverse osmosis As indicated in Fig. 1-29 and the surrounding discussion, desalina-
tion of water by reverse osmosis requires that the feedwater be put under a pressure
which exceeds the osmotic pressure of the feed, thereby creating a difference in
chemical potential of water and causing it to flow through the membrane. As already
discussed in Chap. 1, the fluxes of water and salt through the membrane are usually
described by
Nw = kw(AP - ATI) (1-22)
Ns = MCS1 - CS2) (1-23)
where AP is the difference in total pressure across the membrane and ATT is the
difference in osmotic pressure (both computed as feed side minus product side) and
CS1 and CS2 are the salt concentrations on the high- and low-pressure sides of the
534 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Feed in
Hollow thin-walled
plastic film
Permeate out
I TUBE BUNDLE
Permeate out
Retentate out
Porous sheet
Retentate out
Corrugated spacer
II STACK
Permeate and carrier out
Carrier in
III BI-FLOW STACK
Retentale out
Corrugated spacer
Retentate out
Carrier and
permeate out
IV SPIRAL
Figure 11-7 Membrane-permeation designs (retentate â¢â¢
product). (Amicon Co., Lexington, Massachusetts.)
Feed in
high-pressure product; permeate = low-pressure
membrane, respectively. kv and ks are empirically determined proportionality con-
stants, usually taken to be independent of concentration and flux levels.
Figure 11-1 depicts the transport processes occurring in reverse osmosis used for
desalination of water. The buildup of salt concentration near the membrane because
of preferential passage of water through the membrane, known as concentration
polarization, has two deleterious effects: (1) the increase in CS1 serves to increase the
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 535
driving force for salt transport through the membrane in Eq. (1-23) and thereby
engender more salt leakage into the product water, and (2) the increase in CS1
increases ATI in Eq. (1-22) and thereby necessitates a greater applied total pressure to
produce a given water flux across the membrane, n increases in direct proportion to
Cs if salt activity coefficients do not change.
There have been two primary goals in the design of reverse-osmosis equipment:
(1) incorporation of a large amount of membrane area per unit equipment volume, to
increase the amount of water-product flow per unit volume, and (2) provision of thin
channels and high-velocity flow to increase k, for salt transport back into the bulk
liquid from the membrane surface and reduce the increase of CS1 above CSL
(Fig. 11-1). Figure 11-7 shows some of the flow configurations used for reverse
osmosis, ultrafiltration, and dialysis.
Example 11-4 For seawater. the osmotic pressure is 2.5 MPa. The principal solute is NaCI. for which
the diffusivity in water at 18.5°C is about 1.2 x 10"' m2/s (Reid et al., 1977). Assume that a reverse-
osmosis desalting process is carried out using turbulent flow through a tubular 1.0-cm-diameter
membrane with a system temperature of 18.5°C. Only a small fraction of the fcedwater is taken as
freshwater product, so that the bulk concentration does not change significantly through the process.
Seawater contains 3.5 weight percent dissolved salts, which for the purposes of this problem can be
considered to be entirely NaCI. The feedwater flows inside the membrane tube at a velocity of 1 m's.
The volumetric flux of water through the membrane is 3 x I0~' m/s (m-'/s-m2), and the applied feed
pressure is 8.0 MPa greater than the product-water pressure. The membrane is highly selective for
water over salt, (a) Calculate the percent increase in salt concentration in the product water, referred
to the hypothetical case where there is no concentration polarization and the water flux is the same.
(h) Calculate the percentage reduction in feed pressure that would be possible in the absence of
concentration polarization if the water flux were the same, (c) Which of the following factors would
be effective in reducing the degree of concentration polarization if the water flux is held constant: (1)
reduced temperature; (2) reduced tube diameter with the same mass flow rate of seawater: and (3)
rccirculation of the seawater with the same tube size and length?
Son TION Since this is a liquid solution where salt and water will have unequal partial molal
volumes, it is preferable to use equations based upon Eq. (11-2) rather than Eq. (11-1). Because kc for
salt will be influenced by the high flux of water relative to salt, it is appropriate to use Eq. (1 l-54)to
describe the flux of salt (A = salt. B = water). Taking N± to be very small in comparison with each of
the two right-hand terms and taking | ,VB > |NA | gives
^('Ai - <"AI.) = -c.^Nt (11-67)
NK is negative since the direction of the water flux is from the liquid bulk toward the interface. I BNB
is a volumetric flux, which from the problem statement is equal to -3 x 10~* m3/m2-s. <-A/ js
obtained by converting the weight percent salt to molar-concentration units, using a solution density
of 1020 kg m3 (Perry and Chilton. 1973)
_ (1020 kg soln'm3)(3.5 kg NaCI 100 kg soln)
'M'~ 0.05848 kg NaCl/moi NaCI
= 6.1 x 102 mol/m3
For the limit of very low water flux kc can be obtained from Eq. (11-46). The viscosity of seawater
will be taken, as an approximation, to be equal to that of pure water, which is 1.00 m Pa-s at 18.5°C
(Perry and Chilton. 1973). Hence
.. _df,,p (0.010 m)(1.0ms)(1020kg/m3)
KC â â - â 1U,_UU
/( I0~3 Pa s
(This is within.the turbulent region.)
536 SEPARATION PROCESSES
s __ - =8n
pDu, (1020kg/m3X1.2x I(r9m2/s)
^-Xâ 9--)(0.023)(10,200)08(817)13 = 4.15 x 10'5 m/s
c
(0.01 m)
Since we know I,, \F1 and kc, kjc is obtained from Fig. 11-5 or Eq. (11-61). (The film model is
appropriate for the correction factor, since this is a turbulent-flow situation.)
kjc = e\kc = (1.40)(4.15 x Ifr5 m/s)= 5.81 x 10"5 m/s
We can now substitute into Eq. (1 1-67) to determine CA|:
(5.81 x 10-')(cA, - 6.1 x 102) = -cA,(-3.0 x lO"5)
CA, = 1.26 x 103 mol/m3
The salt concentration adjacent to the membrane is about twice that in the bulk solution.
(a) If we assume that the salt concentration in the product is very low compared with that in
seawater, the ratio of concentration-difference driving forces in Eq. (1-23) is simply the ratio of values
of Csl(=rAi). Hence the salt concentration in the product will increase by a factor of
(1.26 x 103)/(6.1 x 102) = 2.07.
(b) Taking osmotic pressure directly proportional to salt concentration, we find that the
concentration-polarization effect must raise the osmotic pressure from 2.5 to (2.07)(2.5) = 5.18 MPa.
Hence the driving force for water transport in Eq. (1-22) is 8.0 - 5.18 = 2.72 MPa. In the absence of
concentration polarization this same driving force would be required to produce the same flux, by
Eq. (1-22). Hence the difference in total pressure between feed and product should be 2.72 +
2.5 = 5.22 MPa. This is 35 percent less than the 8.0 MPa required in the presence of concentration
polarization.
(c) Factors that raise kt and hence kjc will serve to reduce the degree of concentration polariza-
tion. Lower temperature increases the viscosity and lowers the diffusivity. kc varies as ft~° *7 and
DAB3; hence lower temperature produces a lower kc and makes concentration polarization more
severe. Higher temperature would alleviate concentration polarization.
Reducing tube diameter with the same mass flow rate of water will raise u by a factor equal to
the square of that by which df was reduced, with the result that the Reynolds number increases. Also
dp in the Sherwood number will make k, increase as dr is reduced. Both these effects increase kc. and
so concentration polarization will be reduced.
Recirculation of the seawater will increase u while leaving other factors unchanged. This in-
creases Re and hence kc; it therefore alleviates concentration polarization but does so at the expense
of much more pumping power (more flow and more pressure drop). n
INTERPHASE MASS TRANSFER
Consider, for example, a process in which a substance A is being absorbed from a gas
stream into a liquid solvent.t In order for component A to travel across the interface
from the gas phase to the liquid phase by a diffusional mass-transfer mechanism
t For convenience the following discussion will be conducted for gas-liquid contacting: however, there
is a logical extension to liquid-liquid and fluid-solid systems.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 537
Interface
Gas phase
Liquid phase
Figure 11-8 Concentration and partial-pressure gradients in interface gas-liquid mass transfer.
there must be a gradient in concentration of component A in both phases adjacent to
the interface. This situation is shown schematically in Fig. 11-8. The partial pressure
of component A in the gas and the concentration of component A in the liquid at the
interface (pA( and cAl) will be in equilibrium with each other unless there are extraor-
dinarily high rates of mass transfer. Since component A is traveling from gas to
liquid, pAG, the bulk-gas partial pressure of A will be higher than pAl and cAl will be
higher than CAL, the bulk-liquid concentration of A. Diffusional transfer of a com-
ponent in a binary mixture within a phase must occur in the direction of decreasing
partial pressure or concentration of that component.
The hydrodynamic conditions within each phase and the solute diffusivities
combine to give certain rate coefficients for mass transfer within the two phases.
These are the individual-phase mass-transfer coefficients kx,ky,kG, and/or kc defined
by Eqs. (11-18) to (11-21). For situations of high concentration and/or high flux, they
may be either the kj or the kN coefficients. In any event, there are individual-phase
coefficients for both phases, which relate the flux of component A to the difference
between interfacial and bulk compositions in either phase.
Since generally the interfacial partial pressure and concentration of A are not
readily measurable in a separation device, it is usually more convenient to define and
work in terms of overall mass-transfer coefficients, defined for dilute systems as
NA = KG(PAG - PA'E) (H-68)
NA = *L(fA* - CAL) (11-69)
Here pA£ represents the gas-phase partial pressure of A which would be in equilib-
rium with the prevailing concentration of A in the bulk liquid CAL, and CA£ repre-
538 SEPARATION PROCESSES
sents the liquid-phase concentration of A which would be in equilibrium with the
prevailing partial pressure of A in the bulk gas pAG . For our example of A transfer-
ring from gas to liquid, CA; is necessarily less than cAi; hence it follows that pAt is
necessarily less than pA, , assuming that increasing concentration of A gives increas-
ing equilibrium partial pressure of A. As a result, the partial-pressure-difference
driving force in Eq. (11-68) is greater than that in Eq. (11-20), and Kc is necessarily
less than kG. Similarly K, in Eq. (11-69) is necessarily less than kc in Eq. (11-21).
The overall coefficients comprise contributions from both of the individual phase
coefficients (k(i and fc/,t), and the individual phase coefficients are related to the
hydrodynamic conditions and solute diffusivities in their respective phases. It is the
overall coefficients which are most readily used in the design and analysis of separa-
tion devices, but it is the individual phase coefficients for which correlations against
hydrodynamic conditions and diffusivities are best made. As a result, it is necessary
to use equations or graphical relationships for predicting k0 and k, , and then to
obtain KG or K, from these individual phase coefficients. The equations relating KG .
K, , kc . and k, can be obtained by linearizing the equilibrium relationship to the
form
+ /> (11-70)
and then by combining Eqs. (11-20), (11-21), and (11-68) to (11-70) to give
From Eqs. (11-71) and (11-72) it can be seen that when H is very large, that is. when
A is a relatively insoluble component in the liquid, the term H/k, will outweigh I kc
and as a result K(i will very nearly equal k,JH and KL will very nearly equal kL . In
this case we say the mass-transfer process is liquid-phase-controlled, since the indi-
vidual liquid-phase mass-transfer coefficient affects the mass-transfer rate directly,
whereas the mass-transfer rate is essentially independent of the value of kG . In the
converse situation of a very low H (high solubility of A in the liquid), we find that K,
very nearly equals Hk(i . and KG very nearly equals k(, . Here we have a gas-phase-
controlled mass-transfer process, wherein the mass-transfer rate is directly propor-
tional to /cc but is essentially independent of kL . For a fully liquid-phase-controlled
process we need only ascertain kL and equate it directly to KL, and for a fully
gas-phase-controlled process we need only ascertain kG and equate it directly to KG .
Equations (11-71) and (11-72) are frequently called the addition-of-resistances
equations because of the similarity to the equation for compounding resistances in
series in an electric circuit. A similar relationship holds for relating overall heat-
transfer coefficients to individual-phase heat-transfer coefficients. However, an im-
portant distinction in the mass-transfer case is the presence of the equilibrium
t We shall use k, to represent kc in a liquid system.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 539
solubility, which can change greatly from one solute to another. It is more often the
solute itself than the flow conditions which determine whether a mass-transfer system
is gas-phase- or liquid-phase-controlled.
If mole-fraction driving forces are used for the two phases, the coefficients ky and
kx are used for systems with dilute solutes and Eqs. (11-71) and (11-72) become
*H+£ (n-73)
and w,=WK,=jk+i {11'74)
where K' is dyA/d.xA at equilibrium. For a system with constant KA (= >'A/*A at
equilibrium), K' = K, but for a system with variable KA the two are not, in general,
equal. Ky and Kx are overall coefficients defined by
(11-75)
and NA = Kx(xAE - .VAL) (11-76)
where the subscript E has the same meaning as before.
When there are high-flux and/or high-solute-concentration effects, the procedure
to be used for compounding individual-phase resistances depends upon whether the
kj or /cv coefficients are used. For fcv coefficients the definitions lead directly to the
same equations as used for dilute systems at low flux [Eqs. (11-71) to (11-74)];
however, the individual-phase coefficients themselves must be corrected for high flux
and/or high concentration. As noted earlier, this is straightforward only for the case
of high concentration without high flux or when corrections are made by the film
model.
If kj coefficients are used, the individual-phase coefficients are corrected using
the relationship between 0A and 4>\ or ^A (or 0A and $A or KA) given by Figs. 1 1-5
and 11-6 [or Eqs. (11-61) and (11-62) for the film model], with due attention to
maintaining the proper signs in Eqs. (11-53) and (11-54). The convention employed
by Bird et al. (1960, chap. 21) is to define the overall coefficients as
(1 1-77)
- CM.) + CA£( £ VjN\ (11-78)
\J'
etc. Algebraic combination of these equations with Eqs. (11-53), (11-54), etc., for the
case of all Nj except NA being zero leads to
K
"â¢Jx
,i^ +
^Jc KJc nKJG
540 SEPARATION PROCESSES
0.002
Figure 11-9 Transient diffusion in a sphere with a mass-transfer resistance in the surrounding phase.
etc. When Nj for other components is nonzero, the numerators in the various terms
in Eqs. (11-79) and (11-80) become 1 â (ZN;/./VA).vA£, etc. Since the addition equa-
tion itself involves both N/s and interfacial compositions, it is more difficult to
obtain overall coefficients in high-flux and high-concentration situations.
Transient Diffusion
The solutions of the diffusion equation for transient diffusion in a stagnant medium,
given in Fig. 11-3, were based upon the assumption of constant solute concentration
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 541
at the surface. For an interphase mass-transfer situation, such as leaching from a
spherical solid particle into a surrounding fluid medium, this implies that the mass-
transfer process is completely controlled by resistance to diffusion within the solid
without being influenced significantly by mass-transfer resistance in the surrounding
medium. Solutions to the diffusion equation can also be obtained when the boundary
condition CA, = CA/ = cons at t > 0 is replaced by the boundary condition
K"McA - CA/) = -DAB ^ at z = interface (11-81)
Here z is taken positive outward in the solid medium. K" is the equilibrium partition
coefficient [= (CA in surrounding fluid)/(CA in solid at equilibrium)]. CA/ is the value
of CA in the solid that would be in equilibrium with the prevailing value of CA in the
surrounding fluid, which is presumed not to change.
Figure 11-9 shows such solutions for a solid sphere with a mass-transfer resis-
tance in the surrounding phase. The results are plotted for the average solute concen-
tration within the sphere as a function of the Fourier group (Fo = DAB r/L2) and the
Biot group (Bi = K"fccL/DAB), where DAB is the diffusivity within the sphere, kc is the
mass-transfer coefficient in the surrounding medium, L is the sphere radius, and K" is
the equilibrium partition coefficient, defined above. For short times the solution is
taken by analogy from the corresponding heat-transfer solutions [Grober et al. (1961,
fig. 3.12) or a corresponding plot against Fo and Bi from Hsu (1963)] and for longer
times from the first term of eq. 3.57a from Grober et al. (1961), rearranged to give
fraction remaining. Solutions for the slab and infinite-cylinder geometries are also
given in those references.
It is apparent from Fig. 11-9 that the presence of the external resistance slows the
diffusion process to an extent that is greater the larger the ratio of the external
resistance to the internal diffusivity (Bi''). This is entirely analogous to the effect of a
resistance in the second phase in the addition-of-resistances equations.
Example 11-5 Returning to Example 11-2. suppose that extractive decafTeination of coffee beans is
carried out in a packed bed with a solvent which provides an equilibrium partition coefficient of 0.10
[= (caffeine concentration in solvent ^(concentration of caffeine in beans at equilibrium)]. The sol-
vent has a density of 800 kg/mj and a viscosity of 2.00 mPa ⢠s and flows at a superficial velocity of
0.010 m/s. The bed height is low enough to prevent appreciable buildup of caffeine in the solvent
phase. The diffusivity of caffeine in the solvent is 0.25 x 10 ~9 m2/s. (a) By what factor does the
presence of mass-transfer resistance in the solvent phase increase the time required to reduce the
caffeine content of a bed of beans to 3.0 percent of the initial level? (b) What will be the influence on
the ratio of internal resistance to external resistance (Bi) of (1) decreasing particle size by cutting the
beans. (2) increasing the solvent flow rate, and (3) finding a solvent which gives a higher partition
coefficient into the solvent phase without changing any other solvent properties? Consider each
effect separately.
SOLUTION (a) The Biot number is needed for Fig. 11-9. From Example 11-2. DAB inside the beans =
1.77 x 10"I0 m2/s and L = 0.0030 m.kc comes from Eqs. (11-44) and (11-48), using the properties of
the solvent phase. The beans are assumed to be spherical and to provide a bed voidage of about 0.42.
542 SEPARATION PROCESSES
(0.0030)(0.010)(800)
~ 0.(X)20~~
Jo =117
= 1.17(12)-°-*15 =0.417
= (0.417)(0.010)( 10.000)-23 = 8.98 x 10 " m/s
K"k,L _ (010X8.98^ HT6X0.0030) _
!l"" (b*^.. " ~1^~xTo-^ ' '
For high values of Bi in Fig. 11-9. we can interpolate by taking linear increments in Bi~' between the
curves shown. Using the values of DABI/I? for Bi"1 = 0 and Bi'1 =0.10 at the desired percentage
removal for the interpolation, we have
^f-' = 0.305 + - 'â (0.402 - 0.305) = 0.369
which represents an increase of (0.369 - 0.305)0.305 = 21 percent in the time required for decaffein-
ation to a residual caffeine content equal to 3 percent of the original.
It should be noted that extreme values of several parameters had to be used in order to generate
even this much contribution from the external resistance. Any effective solvent should give a higher
value of K". and a substantially higher solvent velocity would be likely. For the situation described,
the bed height would have to be very low to avoid a significant buildup of caffeine concentration in
the solvent, which would affect the driving force for mass transfer.
(b) Decreasing particle size will decrease Bi in proportion to L1 through the effect of L directly
in Bi and will increase Bi in proportion to L~° 4" through the effect of;D (and hence kc) on Bi. The
net effect is to decrease Bi, thereby making external resistance more important.
Increasing the solvent flow rate will decrease jD in proportion to n'0 a'5 but will increase kc in
proportion to u' "4" = u° *85. This will therefore increase Bi and lessen the importance of external
resistance.
Increasing K" will increase Bi in direct proportion, thereby lessening the importance of external
resistance. D
Combining the Mass-Transfer Coefficient with the Interfacial Area
In most contacting devices the interfacial area between phases is not easily ascer-
tained, and it is the product K0 a or K, a (where a is the interfacial area per unit
volume of equipment) which is required for design. Equations (11-71) and (11-72) are
often converted into the forms
1 l A, (H-82)
Kc,a (kGa)* (M)*
and ââ = 777;âci + r,â^ (11-83)
K,a H(k<;a)* (kLa)*
where (k(i a)* is the product of Kc, and a obtained from a mass-transfer experiment in
which liquid-phase resistance is either suppressed or absent and (k, a)* is the product
of KI and a measured in a mass-transfer experiment in which gas-phase resistance is
either suppressed or absent. Often (kAi will be the equilibrium vapor pressure of
the liquid at 7]. Since Tt is lower than T(i. pA, will be lower than it would be if the
surface temperature were equal to T0. This reduces the rate of evaporation. Con-
/>A, »⢠mass flux
Figure 11-10 Transport processes occurring during evaporation of an isolated mass of liquid.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 547
sideration of both heat transfer and mass transfer is needed in order to predict the
rate of evaporation.
The wet-bulb thermometer is a device making use of the depression of T{ below Tc
to measure pAC or, equivalently, to measure the relative humidity of the surrounding
gas r, where
(11-85)
*w
and P° is the vapor pressure of pure water at Tc .
Example 11-7 (a) Determine the temperature of a small drop of water held stationary in stagnant air
at 300 K when the relative humidity of the air is 25 percent, (b) By what factor is the rate of
evaporation of the drop reduced compared with the rate for a drop temperature equal to Tcl
SOLUTION The air is stagnant, and the mole fraction of water in the air (presumed to be at atmos-
pheric pressure) is low; hence we need not allow for effects of high flux and high concentration.
(a) The mass-transfer coefficient comes from Eq. (11-33) as Sh = 2, or
The analogous heat-transfer expression is Nu = 2, or
where k is thermal conductivity. Combining these two equations, along with the fact that
ka = kc/RT for an ideal gas, gives
h kRT
Substituting into Eq. (11-84). we have
TC-T; = PAB AH,
PA, - PAG kRT
Since temperature varies between the bulk gas and the interface, it is necessary to assume an average
temperature in order to evaluate the physical properties. We shall assume 285 K, in which case
£>AB = 2.37 x 10"' m2/s waler vapor in air
k = 0.0250 J s m ⢠K pure air
AH, = 44.5 kJ mol water
These values are taken from Perry and Chilton (1973, pp. 3-223, 3-216, and 3-206). R is
8.314 J mol K. Hence
ro - T, (2.37 x 10~5)(44.5 x 103)
â = l ' = 0.0178 K. Pa = 17.8 K'kPa
P*.-PAG (0.0250)(8.314)(285)
The vapor pressure of water at 300 K is 26.6 mmHg (Perry and Chilton. 1973). or 3.55 kPa. Hence
pAC is (0.25)(3.55) = 0.886 kPa.
300 - T, r, in K
p., - 0.886 P., in kPa
548 SEPARATION PROCESSES
This expression should be solved jointly with the vapor-pressure expression for water, which relates
T, and pAl. This can be done graphically or by trial and error:
300- T;
T;. K pv,. kPa
PM - 0.886
285 1.393 29.6
290 1.924 9.6
2S7 1.587 18.5
287.2 1.608 17.7
Thus 7] is 287.2 K. Recomputation with the properties determined at (287.2 + 300) 2 = 293.6 K
would produce little change.
(b) The effect of the change in the partial-pressure driving force will outweigh the effect of
changes in physical properties on kti. Hence the factor by which the evaporation rate is depressed
can be calculated from the change in pM - pv-:
(PA.- PAcL,h......â...,., = 1^08 - 0.886
(pA.-PAcL.ho,,.,,..,,â¢,*., 3.55-0.886
The evaporation rale of the drop is only 27 percent as great as it would be if the drop assumed the
bulk-air temperature. n
Example 11-8 A wet-bulb thermometer is made by wrapping a wet wick around the bulb of an
ordinary thermometer. Air is blown at high velocity over the wick. The bulk-air temperature and
relative humidity are 300 K and 25 percent, respectively. Heat conduction along the stem of the
thermometer can be neglected. Find the indicated wet-bulb temperature of the air once the ther-
mometer reaches steady state.
SOLUTION This problem is similar to Example 11-7 except that h and kc should be related through
the Chilton-Colburn analogy (/â = ;â) rather than through the equations for steady-state transport
into a stagnant medium from a sphere (Nu = Sh). From Eqs. (1 l-44)and (11-45). we have forjH =ja
and with kti = kc RT
ft RTCpp\ k
Substituting into Eq. (11-84) yields
PA.-PAH RTCpp\ /c
Since for an ideal gas the molar density is P/RT. we have
_Te_-T, = AH,/DABC,
PA, - PAG PC,\ k
Again we shall assume T,, = 285 K, giving DAB = 2.37 x 10"' m2/s, k = 0.0250 J/s-m-K, and
AH, = 44.5 kJ/mol. Also.
Cr = 993 J /kg ⢠K = 28.8 J/mol K and p = 1.238 kg/m3
Both these properties are for pure air and are taken from Perry and Chilton (1973, pp. 3-134 and
t.-n\ u,,r,.,,.
3-72). Hence
fiABC> = (2.37 x
=
k 0.0250
._
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 549
Equation (11-86) requires the molar Cp, since the density was taken to be molar in replacing RTp
with P:
300 - T. (44.5 x 103 J/mol)(1.17)2'3
/iAj - 0.886 " (1.013 xTd5 Pa)(28.8 J/mol-K.)
= 0.0169 K/Pa = 16.9K/kPa
Coincidentally. this is close to the value obtained for the sphere in a stagnant medium in Example
11-7.
Again, solving jointly with the vapor-pressure relationship for water gives:
TK
300-7]
PA, - 0.886
287.2
1.608
17.7
287.4
1.629
17.0
so that the wet-bulb temperature is 287.4 K. a depression of 12.6 K below the temperature of the bulk
gas. D
The dimensionless group D^BCpp/k in Eq. (11-86) is the ratio of the Prandtl
number to the Schmidt number, known as the Lewis number. It is also the ratio of the
mass diffusivity to the thermal diffusivity. The Lewis number should be of order unity
for a gas mixture, on the basis of the kinetic theory of gases. It is fortunate that the
Lewis number is so close to unity for the water-vapor-air system. With the assump-
tion that Le2/3 = 1 in Eq. (11-86), the equation becomes identical to the equation for
determining the adiabatic-saturation temperature T^ of an air-water mixture. Tm and
PA,
£
Radiation
Radiation
Expression
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 551
The rate-limiting factor in the electrical analogy is the largest resistance (or smallest
conductance) among the set composed of the lowest resistances (or highest conduc-
tances) for each of the steps occurring in series. Similarly, for the mass- and heat-
transfer processes in drying, the rate-limiting factor poses the smallest heat- or
mass-transfer coefficient among the collection of largest coefficients for each of the
steps which must occur in series. The rate-limiting factor for heat transfer will require
the greatest temperature drop (akin to electric potential) for the various steps in
series, and the rate-limiting factor for mass transfer will require the greatest AcA,
A.xA , etc., of the various mass-transfer steps in series. Such an analysis parallels the
development of the addition-of-resistances equation for a gas-liquid system
[Eq. (11-71), etc.]. In a gas-phase-controlled system, kG is the rate-limiting factor; in a
liquid-phase-controlled system, kL is the rate-limiting factor.
It is important to identify the rate-limiting factor because accelerating the overall
rate process most effectively requires that the rate-limiting factor be accelerated.
Increasing the rate of some step that is not rate-limiting will have little or no effect.
As an example, if the following individual heat-transfer coefficients occur in
Eq. (11-87)
Internal: Jicond = 50 /?rad = 2
External: /icond = 1 Jiconv = 10 /irad = 1
all in consistent units, the overall heat-transfer coefficient U is found to be 9.75. The
largest internal h is /icond (50), and the largest external h is /iconv (10). The smallest of
those two is /iconv, and it is therefore the rate-limiting factor. Notice that the overall
coefficient (9.75) is very nearly equal to /iconv (10).
The controlling influence of the rate-limiting factor on the overall rate can be
ascertained by calculating the individual effects of doubling each of the individual
coefficients. Doubling /iconv increases U to 15.5, by a factor of 1.6. The increases in U
from doubling the other coefficients are much less, 7 percent for /irad cxl and heond.eM ,
10 percent for /7cond, inl , and 0.7 percent for /irad, inl .
Experimentally, the rate-limiting step for heat transfer or mass transfer can be
determined by seeing whether the greatest temperature difference (or concentration
difference) occurs between the heat source and the piece surface or within the piece.
The location with the larger driving force is more rate-limiting, since the same flux
must equal the product of the coefficient and the driving force in both the internal
and external steps. The step with the lower coefficient (the rate-limiting step) will
therefore have the larger driving force.
It is also possible for drying processes to be rate-limited by a heat-transfer step or
by a mass-transfer step. Because of the different phenomena and units involved, heat-
and mass-transfer coefficients are not directly additive, but a comparison can be
made if heat- and mass-transfer rates and driving forces are linked through the
latent-heat and the vapor-pressure relationships. Considering only the fastest of each
of the parallel mechanisms for each step, using Eq. (1 1-84), and if the vapor-pressure
relationship is linearized through the Clausius-Clapeyron equation
j pO tj O
ur
at
552 SEPARATION PROCESSES
where P° is the vapor pressure of water, we can relate ApA for any mass-transfer step
to a hypothetical equivalent temperature difference through
An =
PA kti
p°
w-^ AT
(11-89)
for a steady-state process in which free water is present within the drying solid, q is
the heat flux, which for any heat-transfer step is h AT. If we now define a fictitious
overall temperature driving force for the drying process as the temperature of the
heat source minus the temperature that would give an equilibrium partial pressure of
water equal to the actual partial pressure of water at or in the moisture sink, we can
write this overall AT driving force as the sum of the temperature drops for each of the
individual heat- and mass-transfer steps, expressed by Eq. (11-89) or the heat-
transfer relationship:
_
hint
RTl
(AHv)2P°w,avk(
(11-90)
The rate-limiting factor is now the largest of the terms in Eq. (11-90), since that term
consumes the largest fraction of the overall temperature difference. Which factor that
is will determine whether the rate can be accelerated most readily by augmenting
internal or external heat transfer or mass transfer.
It should be pointed out that the derivative in Eq. (11-88) will vary substantially
with temperature, since P° is a nonlinear function of T.
A similar analysis for the rate-limiting factor can be applied to any interphase
simultaneous heat- and mass-transfer process.
Drying rates Typical trends for drying rates during batch drying of moist solids in
commercial dryers are shown qualitatively in Fig. 11-12. After an initial transient A
to B, the rate of moisture removal is typically constant for a time B to C and then falls
off to lower values as time goes on C to D. Period B to C is called the constant-rate
period and C to D the falling-rate period.
For a sufficiently moist solid, early in a batch drying process the water is able to
move fast enough over the short distances below the surface to keep the surface of the
solid entirely wet. Under such circumstances the internal resistances to heat and
mass transfer are not important, and the drying process is rate-limited by either the
external heat- or mass-transfer resistance or both. The situation is then analogous to
evaporation of an isolated mass of liquid if the only heat input is by convection or
conduction from the gas phase. In that case the surface will assume the wet-bulb
temperature of the surrounding gas. This will fix and keep constant the driving forces
for external heat and mass transfer, giving a constant rate of drying with respect to
time or residual-moisture content. Determination of this rate is analogous to the
calculation in Example 11-7, using appropriate heat- and mass-transfer-coefficient
expressions. If there is heat input from other sources, the surface temperature will be
higher than the wet-bulb temperature.
When enough water has been removed for internal transport to be unable to
keep the surface wet, the locus of vaporization retreats into the solid and/or there will
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 553
w
(ft)
dW
di
(b)
dW
cit
(c)
Figure 11-12 Typical drying rates for moist solids;
W = average moisture content, kilograms H2O per
kilogram of dry matter, and / - time since start of
drying: (a) change in moisture content vs. time;
(b) drying rate vs. water content; and (c) drying
rate vs. time. (From McCormick, 1973, p. 20-10;
used by permission.)
be a significant resistance to transport of liquid water to the surface. In either case,
the internal mass- and/or heat-transfer terms in Eq. (11-90) become important. This
produces another significant resistance in series and thereby lowers the drying rate.
This is the beginning of the falling-rate period.
As time goes on, the internal resistances increase, but the external resistances are
unchanged. Hence the drying process swings over to where the rate-limiting factor is
internal mass transfer and/or internal heat transfer. For consolidated media, such as
wood, foods in an unfrozen state, polymer beads, etc., the relatively high solid density
will make the ratio of thermal conductivity to moisture-transport coefficient
554 SEPARATION PROCESSES
sufficiently high for internal mass transfer to be more rate-limiting than internal heat
transfer. For some special cases, e.g., freeze drying foods (King, 1971), the solid
becomes so porous that internal heat transfer is a more significant rate limit than
internal mass transfer.
If the diffusion equation is used to analyze the internal mass-transfer process,
reference to Fig. 11-3 shows that (d In W)/dt should become constant. Taking the
derivative of the logarithm, this implies that \dW/dt \ should decrease linearly in W
as W drops. Such a behavior is shown for the period C to £ in Fig. ll-12b and is
observed experimentally in many instances. However, it is rare for the water-
transport mechanism within the solid to be simple homogeneous diffusion. Other
mechanisms usually enter, and many of them are capable of making the rate vary as
-dW/dt = A- BW.
The drying rate often varies in a simple fashion with changing size for particles of
the same substance. For the constant-rate period, a differential mass balance indi-
cates that
dW
-p,V-fi-=NiA = M*kGA(pM-pM) (11-91)
where ps = dry particle density
A/A = molecular weight of transferring solute
V = particle volume
A = particle surface area
Since the mass flux remains constant throughout the constant-rate period, dWjdt is
proportional to AjV The ratio A'jV is 6/ds if ds is the equivalent-sphere diameter.
Hence the drying rate, expressed as fraction water loss vs. time, varies inversely as the
first power of the particle size during the constant-rate period. On the other hand, if
we apply the transient-diffusion model (Fig. 11-3) to the portion of the falling-rate
period where internal resistances are dominant, the time required to reach a given W
varies as d*, through the Fourier group. Hence, when internal resistance controls, the
drying rate, expressed as fraction water loss vs. time, varies inversely as the second
power of the particle size. A similar conclusion comes from most other potential
mechanisms of internal moisture transport. Therefore the dependence of drying rate
upon particle size gives another way of distinguishing between internal and external
rate limits.
Drying rates and dryer designs are covered in much more detail by Keey (1978).
Example 11-9 Moist extruded catalyst particles are placed as a packed bed in a through-circulation
dryer, in which air at 300 K and 25 percent relative humidity is passed at a superficial velocity of
0.5 m s through the particle bed. The equivalent-sphere diameter of the particles is 1.30 cm, and the
dry particle density is 1500 kg m3. The particles initially contain 1.80 kg H,O per kilogram of solid.
The drying rate experienced for these particles is depressingly low. even in the early period of
drying, only about 20 percent of the moisture removed per hour, (a) What is the rate-limiting factor?
(b) Is the observed rate during the initial drying period reasonable in view of the operating condi-
tions? (r) Evaluate the relative desirability of each of the following suggestions for increasing the
drying rate: (i) halve the panicle size. (/;') double the air velocity. (Hi) desiccate the inlet air. and (ii)
heat the inlet air to increase its temperature by 50 K.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 555
SOLUTION (a) Since the rate is low and apparently relatively constant at the beginning of drying, the
probable rate-limiting factor then is a combination of external heat- and mass-transfer resistances.
External coefficients will be used as the basis for the calculation in part (/>). If they do not substan-
tially overpredict the drying rate, external resistances control during the initial period.
(b) The air temperature and relative humidity are the same as in Example 11-8, and heat is
received by convection only. Hence 7] and pA, will be the values calculated in Example 11-8 during
the period when external resistances to heat and mass transfer control. For the packed bed, jD can be
calculated from Eq. (11-48):
7o=l-
If we assume once again that 7^, = 285 K, ft is found to be 1.78 x 10" * Pa-s (Perry and Chilton,
1973. p. 3-210). Other physical properties come from Examples 11-7 and 11-8:
Jo =1.17
(0.0130 m)(0.5 m/s)(1.238 kg/m3)
1.78 x 10 5 Pa s
= 1.17(452)-° â¢*" = 0.0925
From Eq. (11-44),
, _ JD",
k' Sc2'
1.78x10-*
(1.238)(2.37 x 10-5)
j-j"1-â = 0.0645 m/s
0.0645
RT (8.314)(285)
From Eq. (11-91), substituting AjV = did,, we have
= 2.72 x 10-3 mol/m2-Pa-s
dt W0p,d,
where W0 is the initial water content in kilograms per kilogram of solids.
d(W!W0) _ (6)(0.018 kg/mol)(2.72 x 10'5)(1629 - 886 Pa)
dt "[l.80)(T500)(0.013)
= 6.22 x ID" 's'1
This is the fraction of the initial water removed per second. The fraction removed per hour is
(6.22 x 10 -*)(3600) = 0.224
This agrees reasonably well with the observation of about 20 percent of the water removed per hour
and explains the low rate. In addition, the calculation confirms that external resistances are indeed
rate-limiting at this point.
(c) (i) Halving the particle size halves the Reynolds number, increases ;D by (0.5)~° *" = 1.33,
and increases Ac by the same factor. The combined effects of k0 and ds in Eq. (11-91 (serve to increase
the drying rate by a factor of (2)(1,33) = 2.67.
(ii) Doubling the air velocity doubles the Reynolds number, decreases ;D by a factor of 1.33, and
therefore increases k0 by a factor of 2 1.33 = 1.50. Through Eq. (11-91). this increases the drying rate
by a factor of 1.50.
(Hi) Drying the inlet air completely would reduce the wet-bulb temperature. Repeating the
556 SEPARATION PROCESSES
calculation of Example 11-8 gives a wet-bulb temperature of 2X1 K. with r»A, = 1-065 kPa. The
mass-transfer driving force is thereby increased from 1629 - 886 = 743 Pa to 1065 Pa. If the effect of
the small temperature change on physical properties is neglected, the drying rate increases by a factor
of 1065/743 = 1.43.
(ir) Raising the air temperature to 350 K will increase Tf and hence pA, and the driving force for
mass transfer. If we neglect the change in physical properties over this larger range of temperature, as
an approximation, we find, by the method of Example 11-8, a wet-bulb temperature of 300.5 K.
(Note that pA(; would remain unchanged, since no water vapor is added or subtracted upon heating
the inlet air.) The corresponding />A, is 3650 Pa. The increase in driving force, and increase in drying
rate, is a factor of (3650 - 886) 743 = 3.7.
Comparing these alternatives, we see that heating the air is by far the most effective avenue
unless the catalyst material is heat-sensitive to such an extent that the higher air temperature cannot
be used. If the catalyst is not heat-sensitive, a much higher air temperature than 350 K would be even
more attractive. Comparing the other alternatives, drying the inlet air to get a maximum of 43
percent rate increase seems unattractive, since the drying step would be expensive. Increasing the air
velocity and halving the particle size both increase the pressure drop and power required to
circulate the air. It may not be possible to reduce the particle size because of specifications from the
process(es) where the catalyst will be used. C
DESIGN OF CONTINUOUS COUNTERCURRENT
CONTACTORS
As observed in Chap. 4, continuous countercurrent contactors are often used as an
alternative to discretely staged countercurrent contactors. An example is the irrigated
packed column for gas-liquid contacting, which was compared with a plate column
and with a countercurrent heat exchanger in Figs. 4-13 and 4-16.
As long as each of the counterflowing streams passes through the contactor in
plug flow, the mass-balance equations for a continuous contactor are the same as for
a multistage contactor and the operating line or curve on a y.v diagram is the same.
The equilibrium curve is, of course, unchanged as well, and the only difference is in
how the operating diagram is used to estimate the contactor height required.
Plug flow implies that all fluid elements in a stream move at the same forward
velocity and that there is no mixing in forward or backward directions due to
turbulence, local flow patterns, etc. For relatively tall packed columns and many
other contactors which prevent gross fluid circulation it is a good assumption.
However, for a number of situations it is necessary to allow for departures from plug
flow. This is usually done through the concept of axial dispersion or axial mixing.
which serves to change the operating line or curve. In extreme cases, e.g., the contin-
uous phase of spray extractors and absorbers and bubble-column absorbers, axial-
mixing characteristics can dominate the separation obtained.
We shall consider design methods for plug flow of both phases first and then
consider allowance for axial dispersion.
Plug Flow of Both Streams
The equilibrium and operating curves are the same for staged and plug-flow contin-
uous processes, but the analyses from that point on should be different. In the
continuous-contact process, equilibrium is not attained, and rate effects are control-
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 557
Equilibrium
Figure 11-13 Driving forces for continuous
couniercurrent stripping.
ling, whereas equilibrium conditions alone determine the separation in a discretely
staged equilibrium-stage device. The height of the separation device for a continuous
contactor must be determined from a consideration of the rate of mass transfer, just
as the area of a heat exchanger is determined from a consideration of the rate of heat
transfer.
Allowance for the rate of mass transfer leads to the use of mass-transfer
coefficients, usually overall coefficients obtained by applying the additivity-of-
resistances concept to individual-phase coefficients obtained from correlations and
calibrated where necessary by experiment.
If we consider first a stripping process involving a solute that is dilute in both gas
and liquid, a portion of the operating diagram is shown in Fig. 11-13. The driving
forces in the overall-coefficient mass-transfer-rate expressions, e.g., Eqs. (11-75) and
(11-76), are related to the operating and equilibrium curves. Let us presume that point
P on an operating line in Fig. 11-13 represents the bulk vapor and liquid composi-
tions passing each other at some given level in our packed tower. Compositions
corresponding to >'A, yAE, .YA , and .xAf; are marked in Fig. 11-13. The driving force for
Eq. (11-75), >'A â yA£, is the vertical distance between the equilibrium curve and the
operating line at P, while the driving force for Eq. (11-76), .YAE â XA , is the horizontal
distance between the equilibrium curve and the operating line, also at P. The driving
forces are negative since the equations are written for A going from gas to liquid,
whereas stripping corresponds to A going from liquid to gas.
The interfacial compositions are also shown in Fig. 11-13. Combination of
Eqs. (11-18) and (11-19) shows that the slope of the line from point P to the inter-
facial point is âkjky. If kJK'ky (K' = dy/Jdx^ at equilibrium) is much less than
unity, the system is liquid-phase-controlled, XA â .\-A, is nearly equal to .VA â .VA£ ,
and yM â >'A is much less than yAf; - yA. If, on the other hand, kx/K'ky is much
558 SEPARATION PROCESSES
greater than unity, the system is gas-phase-controlled, yAj â yA is nearly equal to
^AE - yA , and \A - .XA, is much less than .XA - .XA£ .
The rate of mass transfer can also be related to the changes in bulk composition
of the two counterflowing streams from level to level in the tower. For the stripping
process we have
-^7^ = â ^ = rate of mass transfer of A into vapor, mol/s-(m3 tower volume)
A an A an
(11-92)
where h = tower height (measured upward)
A = tower cross-sectional area
V = vapor flow, assumed constant (no y^dV/dh term, etc.), moles
L = liquid flow, assumed constant (no XA dL/dh term, etc.), moles
Combining Eqs. (11-68) and (11-92), along with pA = >'AP, we obtain
A) (11-93)
where a is the interfacial area between phases, expressed as square meters of interface
per cubic meter of total tower volume. The negative of Eq. (11-68) is used since
Eq. (11-92) represents transfer of A into the vapor. The height of packing required
then comes from an integration of Eq. (1 1-93) over the range of yA to be experienced
in that packed height:
.h .>'A.om
-- (11-94)
-
Equation (11-94) is most simply integrated if KUP is constant throughout the
tower. Also K' or H ( = K'P/pM , where pM is the liquid molar density) may vary from
point to point. If we can expect the individual phase coefficients kc and k, to be
relatively constant, KG will tend to be constant for a case of gas-phase-controlled
mass transfer where Kc % kc . K, would be less constant in that case since KL ^. HkG
and H varies. Conversely, for a case of liquid-phase-controlled mass transfer, KL is
usually more constant than KG , since K, ^ k, and KG * k,JH.
For the gas-phase-controlled case, assuming that Kc , P, a, and V are constant,
Eq. (11-94) becomes
v, _(â_&_
Transfer units The quantity on the right-hand side of Eq. (1 1-95) is commonly called
number of transfer units (NTU), an expression originally coined by Chilton and
Colburn (1935). Because the equation is based on the driving force between bulk-
vapor composition and that vapor composition in equilibrium with the bulk liquid in
gas-phase units, we have in this case (NTU)0f;, or overall gas-phase transfer units.
The integral
,».- fjy
(NTU)OG=| âf- (H-96)
⢠-
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 559
a measure of the amount of separation obtained, is the ratio of the change in bulk-gas
composition, yA.oui - >'A.im to the average effective driving force, y\E~y\-
(NTU)OC is the number of properly averaged overall gas-phase driving forces by
which the bulk-gas composition changes.
If the degree of separation is represented by the number of transfer units, we can
obtain the tower height as
If KG, P, a, and V are constant from one level to another in the tower, the height of
packing required must be directly proportional to the number of transfer units
(NTU)OC involved in the separation. The number of transfer units is thus also a
measure of the height requirement in continuous-contacting equipment, just as the
number of equilibrium stages is a measure of number of plates, and hence tower
height, in a plate tower.
The height of a transfer unit (HTU)OC is defined as the combination of flow and
mass-transfer coefficient which give one transfer unit of separation:
(HTU)OG = âVâ (11-98)
The subscripts 0 and G once again refer to the fact that this transfer-unit expression
is based upon the overall gas-phase driving force. A greater KG Pa or a lesser V will
reduce the height requirement per transfer unit of separation.
The definition of (HTU)oC converts Eq. (11-97) into
h = (HTU)OC(NTU)OC (11-99)
If the desired separation (NTU)OC is known and (HTU)OC is obtained from correla-
tions for kta and kca combined to give KGa, the tower height required can be
obtained from Eq. (11-99). Alternatively, if a tower height gives a degree of separa-
tion converted into (NTU)0c. the corresponding value of (HTU)OC can be obtained
from Eq. (11-99).
In the event that the mass-transfer process is liquid-phase-controlled rather than
gas-phase-controlled, one can anticipate that KL will be more nearly constant than
KG, since KL * k, but KG * kL /H. A train of thought parallel to the development of
Eq. (11-95) yields'
hK,p«aA=^ ⢠dx* (U1(X))
*A. in " *^f* A
where pM is the molar density of the liquid.
Again the right-hand side can be used to define a number of transfer units, this
time (NTU)o, , based upon the overall liquid-phase driving force,
⢠J^A. oui A y
(NTU)0,= | -^- (11-101)
' -r A - -^ A F â X A
JtA. in '**' n
560 SEPARATION PROCESSES
as a measure of the separation obtained. Likewise, we can define another height of a
transfer unit (HTU)OL as
(HTU)0,= L (11-102)
so that /i = (NTU)0/,(HTU)oL (11-103)
(HTU)OC and (HTU)OL are in general different numerically [as are (NTU)OG and
(NTU)0/J, since the driving forces used in the defining expressions are different.
Because predicting values of (HTU)OC and (HTU)0/. by Eqs. (11-98) and
(11-102) requires combining kLa and kca by the additivity-of-resistances relations,
individual-phase heights of a transfer unit are sometimes defined by
(HTU)G = â V-â (11-104)
KGarA
and (HTU)L = - â - â (11-105)
Substituting these into the additivity-of-resistances equations (1 1-82) and (1 1-83) and
into Eqs. (11-98) and (11-102) yields
= (HTU)C + (HTU), (1 1-106)
and (HTU)0,= (HTU)L + ---(HTU)G (11-107)
Sometimes correlations report (HTU)G and (HTU)L instead of kca and kLa, in
which case the resulting (HTU)G and (HTU)L can be compounded through
Eqs. (11-106) and (11-107). When HVpsl/LP varies, (HTU)OG and (HTU)OL can
become variable themselves.
Sometimes, also, (HTU)G and (HTU), are used together with the contactor
height to generate numbers of individual-phase transfer units provided by the
contactor, i.e.,
and (NTU)'- = <1M08)
In that case the number of overall gas- or liquid-phase transfer units provided by the
contactor is given by
(IM09)
(NTU)OG /. (NTU)G (NTU),
1 _ (HTU)ot 1 L
- " =H-- (1M1 ;:
In general, the transfer-unit integrals, Eqs. (11-96) and (11-101), must be eval-
uated graphically. For Eq. (1 1-96) this is done by relating an XA to every yA through
the operating-line expression and then obtaining >'Af in equilibrium with that ,\A
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 561
through the equilibrium expression. Similarly, for Eq. (11-101) a >>A is related to
every .VA through the operating-line expression, and the corresponding XA£ is then
obtained from the equilibrium relationship. When KG,KL, K, and/or L change from
one position to another, they should be retained under the integral sign. This pre-
cludes the separation of variables implied by Eqs. (11-99) and (11-103).
When high-concentration and/or high-flux effects are important, they must be
included in the analysis. If kj coefficients are used, the additivity-of-resistances equa-
tions should be used in the form of Eqs. (11-79) and (11-80) or generalizations of
them when some N, besides NA are nonzero. The high-flux corrections should be in-
corporated into the kj coefficients. For /CN coefficients Eqs. (11-63) to (11-66) can be
used if the film model is invoked for the effects of high concentration and/or high flux.
These introduce the film factors [XA/, (J^CA)/, etc.] into the expressions for the
mass-transfer coefficients, and this will generally serve to make the mass-transfer
coefficients variable. If these are the only factors making the mass-transfer
coefficients variable, the separation of variables implicit in the transfer-unit analysis
can be retained by including the film factor in the numerator of the transfer-unit
integral and separating the rest of the mass-transfer coefficient [kL = ^NL(FAcA)/,
etc.] out of the integral into the HTU expression. Similarly, if the total molar flow
changes, the variable portion can be retained in the integral, and a constant multi-
plier, e.g., the flow of nontransferring inerts, can be taken into the HTU expression
(Sherwood et al., 1975; Wilke, 1977).
The following example illustrates the use of the transfer-unit integral for a con-
tinuous countercurrent contactor.
Example 11-10 (a) Find the number of overall gas-phase transfer units required for the distillation
operation solved in Example 5-1 if it is carried out in a packed tower to give the same separation, (b)
Find the packed height required if (HTU)OG = 0.50 m.
SOLUTION (a) In Example 5-1 the separation was specified as
.vA.F = 0.5 xA., = 0.90 r/F = 0.5
hf = saturated liquid N = 5 equilibrium stages (all above feed) besides reboiler
P to give 2AB = 2 Tc = saturated liquid reflux
Solving, we found
db
- = 0.187 - =0.813 xA1> = 0.408
For our purposes in this problem we replace JV as a specification by one of the three separation
variables for which we originally solved. The other separation variables then remain the same
through mass balances. We now solve for (NTU)OG instead of N since the operation is carried out in
a packed tower.
Distillation operations with a narrow volatility gap tend to be limited by the mass-transfer
resistance in the gas phase (see Chap. 12). Therefore Kc tends to be more nearly constant than KL.
and it is most convenient to analyze the distillation through (NTU)ofi. using the integral expressed
by Eq. (11-96).
In Fig. 11-14 the driving forces >\t- - yA for each value of >\ are indicated by the series of
arrows. Figure 11-15 shows a graphical integration carried out on a plot where the horizontal axis is
yA at any point on the operating line and the vertical axis is the reciprocal of the driving force at that
562 SEPARATION PROCESSES
i.o
0.8
0.4
0.2
ll.II
0.2
0.6
0.8
Figure 11-14 Driving force for packed-tower distillation. Example 11-10.
point. We still retain the reboiler as an equilibrium stage; hence the lower limit on yA is 0.580.
corresponding to equilibrium with .\A ,,. The area under the curve is 6.2 units, hence
(NTU)()C = 6.2
Note that this value is different from the number of equilibrium stages (five) above the reboiler.
(h) Using Eq. (11-99). we get
30 r-
20
10
0.5
h = (NTU)0(y(HTU)oc = (6.2)(0.50 m) = 3.1 m of packing height required
D
0.6
0.7
VA
0.8
Figure 11-15 Transfer-unit integral for Example 11-10.
0.9
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 563
Analytical expressions If yA£ is either constant or linear in yA , as would occur for
straight equilibrium and operating lines, we can integrate Eq. (11-96) to give
= ^-BUI~y*-in (11-111)
â
where the subscript LM refers to the logarithmic mean:
/,, â \ (y*E â y\)in â (y\E â *om ,.. ,,_.
\y\E â y\iLM â i â FT - \ â TI - \ â n (11-112)
--
The direct analogy between Eq. (11-111) and the use of the logarithmic-mean-
temperature driving force in the analysis of a simple heat exchanger should be
apparent.
Also, for .XAE constant or linear in XA ,
~ul (11-113)
When either the terminal compositions or V/L are unknown, it is convenient to
use another form of Eq. (11-111). Equation (11-96) can be put in the form
using Eq. (8-1) to linearize the equilibrium expression. When applied to continuous
countercurrent equipment, the mass balance expressed by Eq. (8-2) becomes
yA = .yA.,,ut + p(XA-*A,in) (11-115)
Combining Eqs. (11-114) and (11-115) gives
Integrating, we have
,,.,_., n I . ^A.in + b + (mF/L)(yA. in - yA.ou.) - yA. in
(NTU)oG -
1 - (mV/L)
In {[1 - (mK/L)][(yA,in - wxA.in - fe)/(yA.ou. - mxA.in - b)} + (mV/L)}
1 - (mV/L)
(11-117)
,KITI.. In {[1 - (m WL)][(.vA. in - yA.ou.V^A.ou. - ylou.)] + (mV/L)}
or (NTUU = - 1 - (
(11-118)
564 SEPARATION PROCESSES
.11.1
f'f
O
-c -c
I!I
55
I'I
Figure
LimV.
0.01
0.008
0.006
0.004
0.1X13
0.002
0.001
0.0008
0.0006
0.0005
1 2 3 4 5 6 8 10 20 30 40 50
(NTU)OG
11-16 Plot of Eqs. (11-118) and (11-119) for continuous counter-current contactor. Parameter is
This equation was originally developed by Colburn (1939). Similar equations can be
obtained containing any three terminal concentrations. Equation (11-118) can also
be rearranged to a form explicit in >;A,OU, provided >'Aiin and y*.oul are known:
V'A.in ~ '>'A.OUI
.VA.OUI .VA.OUI
1 - (mV/L)
(11-119)
Equations (11-117) to (11-119) are plotted in Fig. 11-16.
The reader should note the similarity of Eq. (11-118) to Eq. (8-15), which was
developed for discrete equilibrium stages. The only difference occurs in the denomi-
nator of the right-hand term. Similarly, Fig. 11-16 has a form similar to that of
Fig. 8-3, the plot of the Kremser-Souders-Brown equation. The essential difference,
of course, is that one is specific to discretely staged contactors while the other is
specific to continuous countercurrent contactors.
Like the KSB equations. Eqs. (11-117) to (11-119) and Fig. 11-16 can be put into
forms involving XA by substituting XA for \A, (NTU)0/, for (NTU)0(;. I m for ;?i.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 565
L for V, V for L, etc. Thus Fig. 11-16 can also be used as a plot of
(*A,OU. - -VA.ou,)/(*A.in - **.out) vs. (NTU)(;;. with mV/L as the parameter.
Furthermore, for straight equilibrium and operating lines (NTU)0,. can be used
instead of (NTU)00 in the >'A form of these equations and Fig. 11-16 through the
substitution
(NTUU = ^(NTU)0, (11-120)
which follows from Eqs. (11-109) and (11-110). Similarly, for mV/L constant,
Eqs. (ll-106)and (11-107) allow interchangeability between (HTU)OGand (HTU)0,.
through
mV
(HTU)06 = â (HTU)0, (11-121)
HVpu/LP in Eqs. (11-106) to (11-110) is equivalent to mV/L.
The use of Fig. 11-16 and of Eqs. (11-117) to (11-119) is very similar to that of
the KSB equations, as well. Maximum precision in solutions is obtained if the
equations are used so as to place the solution in the lower region of Fig. 11-16. that
is, the yA form for L/mV greater than 1 and the XA form for mV/L greater than 1. The
same reasoning holds with regard to the desirability of making L/mV > I for an
absorber and mV/L > 1 for a stripper, to effect high solute removal. Multiple-section
forms of the Colburn equation can also be derived for continuous countercurrent
contactors, similar to those for staged contactors.
Sherwood et al. (1975, pp. 447-466) present ways of extending the Colburn
equation in approximate fashion to allow for variations in K(, a and V because of a
concentrated gas and for slight to moderate degrees of curvature in the operating and
equilibrium lines.
Example 11-11 A stream of air containing 0.2 mol "â ammonia and saturated with water is con-
tacted countercurrently with water in a packed tower. Operation is isothermal at 25 C and is at
atmospheric pressure. The tower diameter is 0.80 m. and the packing is 1.0-in (2.54-cm) Raschig
rings. The water flow rate is 1.36 kg/s, and the air flow rate is 0.41 kg s. These are the flow conditions
(2.7 kg/s per square meter of tower cross section for water, and 0.82 kg/s per square meter of tower
cross section for air) for which the mass-transfer coefficients were determined in Example 11-6.
Find the height of packing required to remove 99.0 percent of the ammonia in the inlet air if the
inlet water contains no dissolved ammonia. Assume plug flow of both streams.
SOLLTION First we find the transfer-unit requirement. From Example 11-6. the solubility of am-
monia at high dilution such as this is 0.77 mole fraction atm. At atmospheric pressure, this converts
into KNHi = AC^Hl = 1 0.77 = 1.30 = m. The molar flow ratio is obtained as
L=U629=^4
V 0.41 IX
Hence L »iV'= 5.34/1.30 = 4.11.
Since there is no NH3 in the inlet water, >â¢*.ââ, = 0. yA.omM'A.in is specified to be 0.01. By
Eq. (11-118) or Fig. 11-16. (NTU)00- = 5.7.
From part (h) of Example 11-6. \'Kr,a = 1241 m'-Pa-s mol: hence K,,a = 1 1241 = S.06 x
10~* mol m3 Pa s. Substituting into F.q (11-9S), we have
(HTU) â (0.82 kg;m;s)(l mol 0.029 kg) =0346m
KGaPA (8.06 x UK a mol mJ-Pa-s)(1.013 x 105 Pa)
566 SEPARATION PROCESSES
By Eq. (11-99),
h = packed height = (NTU)((C(HTU)OC = (5.7)(0.346) = 1.97 m n
Minimum contactor height In continuous countercurrent separation processes there
will be a minimum number of transfer units required under conditions of infinite
interstage flow. The derivation of the appropriate equations is a relatively simple
matter. For a process in which one flow can become infinite in concept while the
other flow remains finite, the number of transfer units must be based on the flow
which remains finite. For a packed absorber receiving a solute-free absorbent, the
condition of an infinite solvent-to-feed-gas ratio gives
(NTU)OC. min = I'"* " ^ = In ^ (11-122)
'M.in I** .XA.Olll
upon substitution into Eq. (11-96). For a packed binary distillation column, on the
other hand, both flows become infinite together, and total reflux corresponds to
L/V = 1 and y = -\" for the passing streams. Substituting into Eq. (11-96) gives
(NTU)OG.min=|'"'' **** (11-123)
â¢iA.k y\E - -XA
The right-hand side of this equation is identical to the Rayleigh equation (3-16) fora
single-stage semibatch separation. Thus Eqs. (3-17) and (3-18) apply for constant KA
and constant binary aAB, respectively, if In (L/L'0) is replaced by (NTU)0(;-min:
(NTU)oc,min = --1â In ^ (11-124)
*A - -XA,6
/MTI T\ 1 |n -VA.dO ~ -XA)fe , l--XA.i /,, ,--v
(NTU)OG.min -â - In ââ â + In â (11-125)
BAB - XA.MI x\k " - xA.d
More complex cases Additional complications which can enter the analysis of con-
tinuous countercurrent processes include (1) complex phase equilibria, possibly in-
volving chemical reactions; (2) multiple transferring solutes, which may interact with
each other in phase equilibria and mass-transfer coefficients; (3) simultaneous heat
effects; (4) partial phase miscibility in extraction processes; and (5) effects of high flux
and/or high solute concentration.
Multivariate Newton convergence If the mass-transfer coefficients can be predicted
for prevailing compositions and fluxes, these more complex cases can be handled
effectively and efficiently through a numerical computer approach leading to tridi-
agonal orblock-tridiagonal matrices of the sort considered for multistage separations
in Chap. 10 and Appendix E. The method is outlined by Newman (1967/7,1968.1973)
and is suitable for any system of coupled first- or second-order ordinary differential
equations involved in boundary-value problems, where the boundary conditions
may themselves involve first derivatives. The method is closely related to the full
multivariate Newton SC method for discretely staged processes.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 567
Similar to Eqs. (10-1) to (10-5), we can tabulate the equations for a multi-
component continuous countercurrent process; 2 is column height, measured
upward.
1. Component mass balances M (R equations):
0 (11-126)
dz dz
2. Enthalpy balances H:
d(hL) d(HV)
(11-127)
dz dz
3. Summation equations S (two equations):
Z/;=L (11-128)
T.Vj=V (11-129)
4. Mass-transfer rate expressions R (R* equations, where R* is the number of trans-
ferring components):
5. Equilibrium equations E (R* equations):
The M, H, and R equations are now first-order differential equations and are in
general nonlinear. The rate expressions enter because of the rate effects dominating
mass transfer in continuous countercurrent equipment; however, equilibrium expres-
sions are still needed to provide the driving forces for the mass-transfer expressions.
Equations (11-130) could equivalently be replaced by equations involving KLa, Kya,
or Kx a. These equations are coupled with boundary conditions corresponding to the
specification of the problem, e.g., specifications regarding feed and product locations,
compositions, and/or flows at various values of z.
The derivatives in the M, H, and R equations can be converted into finite-
difference form if the column height is broken up into sections of length Az, such that
z = n Az with n = 0, 1, ..., N, where N A: is the total column height:
^ (11-132)
dz
2 Az
Substitution of Eq. (11-132) for the various first derivatives leads to a set of N
simultaneous equations replacing each single equation in Eqs. (11-126) to (11-131).
These equations relate conditions at only three adjacent positions, n + 1, n, and
n â 1; hence the equations form a tridiagonal or block-tridiagonal matrix once they
are linearized by assuming values for all dependent variables. They therefore are
568 SEPARATION PROCESSES
solvable by the full multivariate Newton SC method described for staged separators
in Chap. 10 and Appendix E. Furthermore, in various special subcases the equations
can be handled by the hierarchy of partitioning and simplification methods outlined
for staged contactors in Fig. 10-12 and all the associated discussion. For design
problems, as opposed to operating problems, simultaneous convergence of the
column height is appropriate, similar to the method of Ricker and Grens for multi-
stage distillation, described in Chap. 10.
The equations for continuous countercurrent contactors are similar in form and
method of solution to those for staged contactors, but it is also important to stress
the two essential differences between them: (1) The subscript p, representing stage
number, is replaced by the subscript n, representing column height in arbitrary
divisions. The changes from stage p to stage p + 1 in a staged contactor are in general
not equivalent to the changes from level n to level n + 1 in a continuous contactor.
(2) The R equations appear in the set for continuous countercurrent contactors,
whereas rate effects do not enter in the analysis of an equilibrium-stage contactor.
An example of the use of the full multivariate Newton SC method for analyzing
vacuum steam stripping of gases from water in a packed column is given by Rasquin
(1977) and Rasquin et al. (1977).
Relaxation Once Eqs. (11-126) to (11-131) are put in finite-difference form, they are
also subject to solution by relaxation methods, provided terms are included to
account for transient changes associated with liquid holdup. Thus, terms for (UJL) x
(dlj/dt) are required in Eqs. (11-126), where Un is the amount of liquid holdup in one
of the incremental column sections. The resulting equation is analogous to
Eq. (10-45) for staged contactors. A similar term is needed in Eq. (11-127), involving
transient changes in liquid enthalpy. The methods for using relaxation techniques to
solve the resulting equations are then analogous to those discussed for staged contac-
tors in Chap. 10.
Stockar and Wilke (1977a) describe a relaxation method for analyzing contin-
uous countercurrent gas absorbers with heat effects.
As for staged contactors, it should be effective to combine a relaxation solution
for the first several iterations with a multivariate Newton SC method for subsequent
iterations in analyzing complex continuous countercurrent contactors.
Limitations Overall mass-transfer coefficients are required for any of the approaches
for calculating the performance of continuous countercurrent contactors. Prediction
of these must allow for hydrodynamic effects (usually through correlations) and effects
of high flux and or high concentration level, if important. Interfacial areas are also
required and often must be obtained by correlation, sometimes together with the
mass-transfer coefficients. Departures from simple additivity of resistances because of
varying ratios of k(i to A:, over the contacting interface can also complicate analysis.
Multicomponent diffusion is complex (Cussler, 1976; etc.). and mass-transfer
coefficients for solutes in systems where several transferring components are present
in substantial concentrations are often not simple extensions of mass-transfer
coefficients measured in binary or dilute systems. This is the result of interaction of
component fluxes in the basic diffusion equations.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 569
Short-cut methods Stockar and Wilke (19776) have developed an approximate
method for relating the separation to the column height in packed gas absorbers
where there is a significant heat effect leading to an internal temperature maximum.
The approach is to predict the magnitude of the maximum increase in temperature
through a semiempirical correlation, to use this value to predict the entire tempera-
ture profile, and then to use the resultant temperature profile through either a
transfer-unit integral or a modification of Eq. (11-118) and Fig. 11-16. allowing for
the curved equilibrium line. When the product of flow rate and heat capacity in one
phase considerably exceeds the product in the other phase, an even simpler approach
can be used, awarding the entire heat of absorption to the phase with the higher
product of flow rate and heat capacity and thereby calculating the temperature
increase of that phase as it passes through the column (see also Wilke, 1977).
Eduljee (1975) proposes a correlation for transfer units in continuous contactors
for distillation, similar to the Gilliland correlation (Fig. 9-1) for equilibrium-stage
contactors.
Height equivalent to a theoretical plate (HETP) Since methods for analyzing distilla-
tion and other countercurrent separations in terms of equilibrium stages are so well
developed, another approximate approach toward analysis of continuous counter-
current contactors has used the concept of the height of a theoretical plate ( = equilib-
rium stage) HETP. The column height for a given separation is then obtained as
h = HETP x N, where N is the number of equilibrium stages required for the separ-
ation. Various correlations have been put forward for predicting HETP in distilla-
tion (see, for example, Perry and Chilton, 1973, p. 18-49). In general, however, it can
be expected that HETP would change considerably with respect to operating condi-
tions, liquid properties, etc., since it would be determined by a complex combination
of many different factors.
If the HETP concept is to be used, a more appropriate technique is that
described by Sherwood et al. (1975, pp. 518-524), where HETP is related to
(HTU)OG through a linearization of the operating- and equilibrium-curve expres-
sions, giving
Values of (HTU)OG are predicted from values of KGa through Eq. (11-98) in the
usual way and are then converted into HETP through Eq. (1 1-133). Since mVIL will
change considerably throughout a typical distillation, HETP will change with re-
spect to composition, even though (HTU)OC may not. In such a case, it is advisable to
calculate a new value of HETP for each equilibrium stage. For concentrated absorb-
ers and strippers it is also necessary to allow for XA/ [Eq. (11-65)] or its equivalent
in the prediction of (HTU)OG.
Since the contactor height must be the same, Eq. (1 1-133) can also be converted
into a form relating the equilibrium-stage requirement N and the overall gas-phase
transfer-unit requirement (NTU)0(; for a given separation:
570 SEPARATION PROCESSES
One could as well use Eq. (11-134) to obtain an equivalent number of transfer units
for each stage during a calculation of a continuous countercurrent contactor by
equilibrium-stage equations.
From Eqs. (11-133) and (11-134) it can be seen that (NTU)OG will be greater
than N for a given separation and (HTU)OG will be less than HETP ifmV/L < 1. The
reverse is true if mVjL > 1.
Allowance for Axial Dispersion
The methods presented so far for analysis of continuous countercurrent contactors
have been based upon the assumption of plug flow of the counterflowing streams.
This leads to operating lines or curves identical to those for the same flow rates in
staged equipment. Plug flow corresponds to forward movement of all elements of a
stream at the same linear velocity, with no mixing in a forward or backward
direction.
Departures from plug flow can occur for any or all of several reasons:
1. Longitudinal mixing can occur because of turbulence or because of the presence of well-
mixed pockets along the flow path, e.g., large void spaces in a packed column.
2. Drag from the motion of one of the counterflowing streams can cause local reverse flow of
the other stream. An example is countercurrent contacting of a liquid at a high flow rate
with a gas at a low flow rate, where there is resultant local reverse flow of the gas. Another
example is a spray contactor, where the motion of the dispersed droplets causes large-scale
mixing motions in the continuous phase.
3. Fluid elements can move forward at locally different velocities because of velocity gradients
or because of inhomogeneities in a packing, e.g.. near a wall. Even in laminar flow in a tube
the fluid at the center moves at a much greater axial velocity than the fluid near the walls.
Extreme forms of this phenomenon are known as channeling.
Mixing in the radial direction, perpendicular to the overall direction of flow, serves to
reduce the amount of apparent mixing or dispersion in the direction of flow. Differ-
ences in composition which develop over a cross section because of channeling,
longitudinal mixing, etc., are ironed out by mixing or diffusion across the cross
section. This leads to the interesting situation, known as Taylor dispersion, where the
apparent diffusion coefficient for axial or longitudinal dispersion in laminar flow
varies inversely with the molecular diffusion coefficient (Sherwood et al., 1975,
pp. 81-82). This follows since the velocity profile causes the axial spread of solute
whereas molecular diffusion in the radial direction serves to remix the fluid and
reduce axial dispersion.
Departures from plug flow due to axial-dispersion effects are most severe (1)
when a design calls for a change in solute concentration by a very large factor in a
separator, e.g., 99.9 percent solute removal, (2) when a relatively low (HTU)OC or
(HTU)0/ means that a relatively short contactor accomplishes a substantial number
of transfer units, (3) when large eddies or circulation patterns can develop in a
continuous phase because of a lack of flow constrictions, (4) when there is a wide
distribution of drop sizes in the dispersed phase of a gravity-driven contactor, and/or
(5) when there is a very large or very small flow ratio. Allowance for axial dispersion
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 571
Axial mixing
(Pe =Pe =4)
Contactor height (z) from bottom
Figure 11-17 Concentration profiles for a continuous countercurrent stripping operation, with and
without axial mixing. ( Adapted from Pratt, 1975, p. 75; used by permission.)
is particularly important in the analysis of most column-form liquid-liquid extrac-
tors, gas-liquid spray columns, fixed-bed separation processes such as chromato-
graphy, and the cross-flow contacting on the individual plates of a plate column, in
addition to other situations.
The effect of axial dispersion upon the performance of a continuous countercur-
rent contactor is shown in Figs. 11-17 and 11-18, which show a solution for axial
dispersion described by effective axial diffusion coefficients in both streams. Figure
11-17 shows concentration profiles of the two counterflowing streams vs. contactor
length, and Fig. 11-18 is the resulting yx operating diagram. Curves are shown both
for the absence and presence of axial mixing. From Fig. 11-17 it can be seen that
axial mixing produces two effects: (1) a general reduction in the concentration gra-
dients along the column length, resulting from concentrations being evened out by
the axial mixing process, and (2) a jump in concentration at the inlet of each stream.
The concentration at the feed level within the column is different from the concentra-
tion of the feed itself because of the dilution of the feed by material brought from
farther within the column by the axial-mixing effect. The concentration jump at the
feed inlet is specific to mechanisms 1 and 2, mentioned at the beginning of this section,
but does not occur for the third mechanism of differences in forward velocity.
572 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Figure 11-18 Operating diagram for stripping operation of Fig. 11-17. with and without axial mixing.
< Adapted from Pratt. 1975, p. 75: used hy permission.)
The axial-mixing effects necessarily draw the curves for .\-A vs. : and for >'A vs. z
closer together in Fig. 11-17, reducing the concentration-difference driving force for
mass transfer between the counterflowing streams. This effect can also be seen on the
equivalent operating diagram (Fig. 11-18). The inlet-concentration jumps displace
the ends of the operating curve inward toward the equilibrium line from the
plug-flow operating line, and the entire operating curve with axial mixing is located
closer to the equilibrium line than in plug flow. This reduction in concentration-
difference driving force decreases the denominator of Eqs. (11-95) and (11-96) [or
Eq. (11-101)], making more transfer units and more contactor height necessary to
accomplish a given separation. Alternatively, less separation is accomplished with a
given contactor height. The greater the amount of axial mixing the greater the effect.
Models of axial mixing For the most part, two basic models have been used to
analyze the effect of axial mixing on the performance of countercurrent contactors.
These are the differential model, treating axial mixing as a diffusion process, and the
stagewise backmixing model, treating axial mixing as a succession of mixed stages or
mixing cells with both forward flow and backflow between stages.
Differential model When axial mixing is described as a diffusion process with an
equivalent axial-diffusion coefficient in either phase, Eqs. (11-92) and (11-93) for VA
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 573
and for XA are modified by the addition of axial-diffusion terms, denoting the
difference between the diffusive fluxes of component A out of and into a differential
slice of column height as dNA /dz = â EC d2.xA /dz2, where £ is an effective axial
diffusion coefficient. £ is at least as large as the molecular diffusion coefficient but
usually is orders of magnitude greater. It must be determined and correlated exper-
imentally for different types of contacting equipment.
The resulting equations for the y and x phases, assuming constant total flows, are
^-yA) (n-135)
A dz >' dz2 m ' 's "
~TJ[~ E*Cxdd^ = ~K'-ac^ ~ XAE) (1M36>
These are simultaneous second-order ordinary differential equations, coupled
through yAt = »IXA + b and yA = m.vA£ + b. cy and cx are the molar densities in the y
and x phases. The boundary conditions most often used (see, for example, Miyauchi
and Vermeulen, 1963) are
-j (XA - >'AF) = EyCy -IT- at z = 0 (11-137)
and -(XAF-XA)=£,CXâ at 2 =/i (11-138)
for the stream inlets (subscript F = feed compositions), and
£y% = 0 at2 = /i (11-139)
and £^ = 0 at z = 0 (11-140)
dz
at the stream outlets. Equations (11-137) and (11-138) give the inlet concentration
jumps directly. Figure 11-17 shows that dyA Id: and d.xA /dz -»0 at the stream outlets,
corresponding to Eqs. (11-139) and (11-140).
Solutions to Eqs. (11-135) and (11-136) with boundary conditions given by
Eqs. (11-137) to (11-140) necessarily involve seven dimensionless groups: (1) a
dimensionless y-phase concentration, such as (yA - yAf)/(yAf;.XA=XAf - >'AF), (2) a
dimensionless .v-phase concentration, (3) a y-phase column Peclet number
Pey = Vh/AEycy, (4) an .x-phase column Peclet number Pex = Lh/AExcx, (5) the
stripping or extraction factor mV/L, (6) the number of transfer units provided in the
absence of axial mixing, /7/(HTU)o; = hKLacxA/L, or, instead, the related
/i/(HTU)oc expression, and (7) fractional column height :/h.
Stagewise backmixing model Figure 11-19 shows the assumptions of the stagewise-
backmixing model, as applied to a three-stage contactor./, is the fraction of the net
forward-flowing liquid stream that backmixes to the previous stage, and fy is the
fraction of the net forward-flowing vapor stream that backmixes. This leads to two
574 SEPARATION PROCESSES
id +/t)
â¢
JfA2
id
I'd
I
y.\F
>'A3
'A2
Figure 11-19 Stagewise-backmixing
model for three-stage contactor.
sets of difference equations, where the subscripts p - 1, p, p + 1, etc.. refer to stage
numbers:
.,+ I - 0
1-141)
and
2/( )vA.
- (VA.P - vA£.p) (11-142)
N is the total number of stages. Boundary conditions have usually been obtained by
adding fictitious end stages in which settling (but no mass transfer) occurs. This gives
and
â¢VAF+.//..vA..v = (l + //>A..V + I
y\F +f\ y.\.i = (i +./r)yA.o
(11-143)
(11-144)
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 575
at the phase inlets, and
and y*.N = y*.N + i (11-146)
at the phase outlets.
Solutions to the stagewise-backmixing model involve eight dimensionless
groups, which are the same as those for the differential model, except that the two
column Peclet numbers are replaced by the two fraction backmixing parameters, J'L
and/,- . The added group is N.
The differential model should be more appropriate for devices such as packed
columns which are the same throughout the contacting height, while the stagewise-
backmixing model resembles more closely the physical characteristics of compart-
mentalized column extractors, e.g., the rotating-disk contactor (RDC) shown in
Fig. 4-22. Notice that the stagewise-backmixing model, as described here, allows for
rate limitations on mass transfer within a stage [Eqs. (11-141) and (11-142)]. It is also
possible to use a backmixing model with equilibrium stages or with specified
Murphree efficiencies.
Both the differential and stagewise-backmixing models postulate that an element
of fluid is as likely to go forward as backward relative to the average forward flow of
a stream. It is therefore not too surprising that solutions to the two models become
the same in form for a large number of stages N, with the following interchange of
variables:
Pe* (1M47)
N j-'Pe,. (11-148)
(Mecklenburgh and Hartland, 1975).
Other models Mecklenburgh and Hartland (1975) describe additional modeling
approaches taking into account differences in forward velocities and cross mixing
between such streams. Kerkhof and Thijssen (1974) present a modeling approach
based upon a series of mixing cells that is a different number for each phase with no
backmixing between cells.
Analytical solutions Analytical solutions to both the differential and stagewise-
backmixing models are generally quite complex, even for a linear equilibrium rela-
tionship and constant total flows. As is shown clearly, by Pratt (1975) for example,
when Eqs. (11-135) and (11-136) are combined for the differential model, a fourth-
order ordinary differential equation results. The solution to this equation, for .YA or
>'A as a function of :, is a summation of exponential terms, the coefficients in the
exponents themselves being implicit roots of a characteristic equation. Furthermore
the coefficients of the terms themselves are determined from simultaneous solution of
four equations involving the boundary conditions. Similarly (see, for example, Pratt,
576 SEPARATION PROCESSES
1976h), the stagewise-backmixing model reduces to a fourth-order difference equa-
tion in >'A or .\A, the solution being another sum of exponential terms with the
coefficients in the exponents determined from another characteristic equation and
the coefficients of the terms coming from simultaneous equations. If the problem is a
design problem rather than an operating problem, the situation is complicated even
further by the fact that the column height appears in the Peclet numbers, which enter
strongly into the characteristic equations, necessitating a complicated iterative
solution.
Mecklenburgh and Hartland (1975) have compiled and analyzed solutions to
both the basic models for countercurrent contacting, considering many simpler sub-
cases of the general problem. They present convenient algorithms which can be used
for attacking design and operating problems under various circumstances. Miyauchi
and Vermeulen (1963) have also summarized solutions to the differential model for
both the general case (with linear equilibrium) and various subcases.
Pratt (1975) has presented an approximate method which is satisfactory for
design problems where mV/L lies between 0.5 and 2 and where the contactor length
exceeds 1.3m and (NTU)0;t and (NTU)0>. exceed 2. The method involves solving the
cubic characteristic equation restated in terms of local Peclet numbers,
Pe'y = Vdp/AEycy and Pe^ = Ldp/AExcx, and then using the roots of that equation
directly in approximate algebraic expressions. PeJ. and Pe^ involve a local character-
istic dimension, e.g., the packing size dp, instead of the unknown column height h:
these local Peclet numbers are functions of packing geometry and flow conditions
alone, determined experimentally. Pey = Pe'yh/dp, and Pex = Pe'xh/dp. Pratt (1976a)
suggests handling cases of curved equilibrium by dividing the column into two or
three subsections and applying the linear-equilibrium analysis to each. A similar
approach can be applied for the stagewise-backmixing model (Pratt, \916b).
Rod (1964) describes a graphical method involving a modified operating dia-
gram suitable for cases of curved equilibrium and axial mixing in only one phase. It is
difficult to extend this method to cases with axial mixing in both phases, however
(Mecklenburgh and Hartland, 1967).
One situation which arises with some frequency and for which there is a rela-
tively simple analytical solution is the case where L/mV is effectively zero and there is
axial mixing in the .v phase. This could correspond to a situation where VjL is very
large or where XA/.; is effectively zero or constant throughout the contactor, perhaps
as a result of an irreversible reaction of A in the y phase. Since L/mV -> 0 and XAE
does not change along the contactor, axial mixing in the y phase is unimportant. The
equation for the outlet concentration of the x phase (Miyauchi and Vermeulen, 1963)
is
where
â¢*A,oul ^At,oul_ wrv . , tAn\
XA .n _ XA£ ou( ~ (1^. v)2e(>Pe,)/2 _ (1 _ v)2e-(vPcJa
12
(11-150)
Another extreme occasionally encountered is that where there is essentially com-
plete axial mixing of one phase and negligible axial mixing in the other phase. The
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 577
rise of uniform bubbles through a short height of liquid or the fall of drops through a
short height of gas can approach this situation. If it is the liquid that is well mixed
and the vapor that is unmixed at all points .XA = .\'A.OU1 and _yA£ = m.vA-out + b. Sub-
stituting into Eq. (11-95) and integrating gives
hAKGaP h (yAE - >'A.in) - (yA.oul - yA.in)
or .ou.-. in = j _ ^,-MHTUtoc (1 1-152)
Modified Colburn plots For linear equilibrium and any combination of Pe^ and Pey it
is possible to depict the solution of the differential model for effects of axial disper-
sion graphically, in the same form used in Fig. 1 1-16. This can also be done for the
stagewise-backmixing model for any combination of J'L , fy , and N, with linear
equilibrium.
Figure 11-20 shows such a plot for the case of a contactor where Pex = 10 and
Pey = 20, such as might typify the operation of an RDC extractor. The plug-flow
solution is presented for comparison. From the figure it is apparent (1) that the axial
dispersion serves to reduce the separation obtained with a given contactor height and
(2) that the effect of axial mixing in reducing the separation is particularly severe for
mV/L of the order of unity and slightly above. There is only a small effect for the
asymptotic curves occurring for mV/L < 1.
Numerical solutions The equations for the stagewise-backmixing model
[Eqs. (11-141) and (11-142)] are both tridiagonal. If/). , /( , m, and KLacx/Lare not
functions of composition, and if multiple transferring solutes do not interact through
phase equilibrium or mass-transfer expressions, the equations can be solved by the
Thomas method for each solute.
If the coefficients are dependent upon composition and/or if the solutes do
interact, the equations can still be handled as a set of simultaneous nonlinear equa-
tions which will take the block-tridiagonal form (Chap. 10 and Appendix E) upon
successive linearization in a successive approximation solution. McSwain and
Durbin (1966) describe an approach of this type, using a pentadiagonal matrix to
solve a problem with one transferring component. Ricker et al. (1979) extend the
method to multiple transferring solutes, allowance for mass-transfer resistances in
both phases, more complex phase equilibria, and systems described by the diffusion
model.
Equations (11-137) and (11-138) for the differential model can be converted into
difference equations by dividing the column height into a succession of slices and
replacing the derivatives by Eq. (11-132) for the first derivative and
d2f(=)
dz2
/(r)n+1-2/(.-)n+/(.)â_,
(11-153)
for the second derivative. This converts Eqs. (11-137) and (11-138) into simultaneous
sets, each composed of tridiagonal equations. In fact, the resulting equations are very
578 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Plug now
Pe = 10. Pev. = 20
0.07-
0.04-
(HTU)oi
= (NTU)ot for plug How
Figure 11-20 Modified Colburn plot, showing effects of axial dispersion for Pe, = 10 and Pe, = 20.
( AJapteil from Earhart, 1975.)
nearly the same as those for the stagewise-backmixing model, except for how the first
derivatives are approximated. The equations resulting from putting the differential
model into difference form can then also be solved by the block-tridiagonal-matrix
method. Newman (19676, 1968) shows how the first derivatives in the boundary
conditions can be handled through image points. The equations are linear if E,. £,.,
m. and Kt acx L are not functions of composition and solutes do not interact. If any
or all of those parameters do vary with composition, a successive-approximation
solution can be made by the full multivariate Newton SC method.
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 579
These solutions, as described, are suitable for operating problems, where h is
known. For design problems with unknown h, the solution can be obtained as an
interpolation between successive operating problems. If successive approximation is
required to solve the operating subproblems because of nonlinearity, one can then
devise a method similar to that of Ricker and Grens for staged distillation (Chap. 10)
to converge the column height simultaneously with the compositions.
h 0.155
riNTi n l â â
From Eq. (11-101),
[(NTUWW,.. [(HTUWUnow " 029
= 0.53
t(NTUWU,n.. - In-^â
V\l VA.oul
and so â = e = 0.586
j A. out A. oul -0 53 a co/
Substituting into Eq. (11-149) gives
XA.in â VA.oul
4v(,0.32
0 S°fS â
By trial and error,
(1 + v)V"< - (1 - v)2e-° 32>
From Eq. (11-150),
v = 2.27
Example 11-12+ Sherwood and Holloway (1940) report data for the desorption of oxygen from
water into air flowing at atmospheric pressure in a 0.51-m-diameter column packed with 5.1-cm
Raschig rings to a height of 15.5 cm. For water flows and air flows of 5.4 and 0.31 kg/sm2. respec-
tively, the value of (HTU)0L reported at 25°C was 0.29 m. calculated assuming plug flow of both
phases. For the same packing and flow conditions Dunnet al. (1977) report Pex = 0.21. (a) What was
the true (HTU)OL in the Sherwood and Holloway experiment, calculated allowing for axial mixing?
(h) Calculate the removal of oxygen for a column with the same packing and flow conditions but a
packed height of 2.5 m. Express the removal as the percent of the total removal achievable if
equilibrium were obtained with air. By how much does axial mixing increase the height requirement
for this removal?
Solution Because of the very low solubility of oxygen in water (Fig. 6-6) the system is completely
liquid-phase-controlled for mass transfer (KLa * k, a), and the amount of oxygen buildup in the gas
phase from the desorption process is negligible. Hence L/mV-tO, and Eq. (11-149) can be used to
analyze the effect of axial dispersion.
(a) For the 15.5-cm packed height. Pe, = Pe'xh/dp = (0.21)(15.5 5.1) = 0.64. Substituting into
Eq. (11-103) for plug flow, we have
(HTUW 4 4
0.155
HTU â, = = 0.235 m
v "" 0.66
Allowance for axial mixing served to reduce (HTU)()( to 0.235 0.29 = 81 percent of the apparent
plug-flow value.
t Adapted from Sherwood et al.. 1975. pp. 615-616; used by permission.
580 SEPARATION PROCESSES
(h) For the 2.5-m packed height. Pe, = (0.21)(250 5.1) = 10.3. Substituting into Eq. (11-150)
gives
v- i + M")
(0.235)00.3)
The value is the same as in part (a) since h Pct is constant.
Substituting into Eq. (11-149) yields
~ R = (3.27)V"TK10-3"J
where R is the fraction of the equilibrium removal achieved. Solving, we have
I - R = 0.0012
so that the removal is 99.88 percent of the equilibrium removal.
The transfer-unit requirement for the same removal in the plug-flow case can be obtained from
Fig. 11-16 or Eq. (I1-1IX), put in the form involving \, and (NTU),,,, in which case mV'X-> ao.
giving (NTU),,, = 6.73. The height if plug flow prevailed would then be
''piuffio, = (6.73)(0.235) = 1.58 m
Axial dispersion has increased the required packed height by a factor of 2.5 1.58 = 1.58, or by 58
percent. D
Example 11-12 illustrates the upper range of effects that can be expected from
axial mixing in packed gas-liquid contactors, since (HTU)o; is relatively low. In part
(a) the small packed height made Pex relatively small (0.64), so that there was an
amount of mixing large enough to affect the separation even though the liquid solute
concentration did not change by much of a factor through the column. In part (b) the
value of Pev was much higher, signifying a much smaller amount of axial mixing.
However, the effect of this smaller amount of axial mixing on the height requirement
was even greater than in part (a) because the liquid concentration changed by a very
large factor through the column.
DESIGN OF CONTINUOUS COCURRENT CONTACTORS
Continuous-contactor separation processes requiring the action of less than one
equilibrium stage to accomplish the desired separation can be operated in cocurrent,
as well as countercurrent-rlow configurations. Figure ll-21a shows a packed gas-
liquid contactor operated with countcrcurrent flow, while Fig. ll-21b shows a
packed gas-liquid contactor with cocurrent flow. As is further discussed in Chap. 12,
cocurrent flow can give higher throughput and more rapid interphase mass transfer
but does not give the benefits of multiple staging.
The analysis of a continuous cocurrent contactor is quite similar to that of a
countercurrent contactor. For plug flow the rate expressions, Eqs. (11-75) and
(11-76), are the same, and the mass balance is changed by a minus sign. For gas-
liquid cocurrent flow, the equivalent of Eq. (11-92) is
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 581
Gas out
Liquid in
Liquid in
x. â
Liquid out
Gas in
>'.<.,n
Gas in
>4,ln
Liquid out
Gas out
(a)
(h)
Figure 11-21 (a) Countercurrent and (fc) cocurrent packed gas-liquid contactors.
â- -jj^ = â -77^ = rate of mass transfer of A into vapor, mol/s-(m3 tower volume)
A an A an
(11-154)
Equations (11-92) and (11-154) differ only by a minus sign on the first term.
Carrying through for cocurrent flow the same derivation that led to Eq. (11-94),
we find
(11-155)
which is identical to Eq. (11-94). Similarly, Eq. (11-100) involving KL is unchanged.
The two types of contactor differ, however, in the functionality between yAE and
yA , as is shown in Fig. 1 1-22 for a stripping process in which a solute is removed
from liquid into a gas. The operating line for the countercurrent case is given by
- L.xA =
KyA.oul - L.xA. i
while that for cocurrent flow is
= KyA
^A. in
1-156)
(11-157)
The operating lines in Fig. 1 1-22 have been set up so that the terminal gas and liquid
compositions are the same in the cocurrent and countercurrent cases. For any value
of yA , the mass-transfer driving force yA - yAE is given by the vertical arrows shown
in Fig. 1 1-22. Clearly yA - yAt at a given yA is different for cocurrent flow than for
countercurrent flow, because of the different placement of the operating line. Con-
sequently, the transfer-unit integrals will have different values, and the packed
582 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Operating j
I
I
Equilibrium ><
N
, j Operating -^
(a)
Figure 11-22 Driving forces for (a) countercurrent and (b) cocurrent strippers.
heights required for a given separation will be different for the two cases, even though
KG Pa may be the same.
The integral in Eq. (11-155) can be used again to define a number of transfer
units through Eq. (11-96). With straight operating and equilibrium lines an analyti-
cal solution can be obtained but differs from that for countercurrent flow because of
the different operating-line expression. For cocurrent flow, the equivalent of
Eq. (11-118) is
(NTU)OG =
In {[1 + (mV/L)][(y^.M - >'.tou.)/(yA.ou, - >lou.)] - (mV/L)}
1 + (mV/L)
(11-158)
For more complex situations involving curved equilibria, variable Kc a, multi-
component systems, varying total flows, interacting solutes, etc., the block-
tridiagonal matrix solution can be used in the same way as for complex cases with
countercurrent plug flow. However, cocurrent-flow computations are usually more
readily accomplished as initial-value problems, analogous to stage-by-stage methods
for multistage separation processes. The computation should start at the feed end of
the column and proceed forward, increment by increment. This initial-value
approach is not suitable for most countercurrent contactors for reasons entirely
analogous to those for the unsuitability of stage-to-stage methods for most multi-
component multistage separations, i.e., errors in assumed terminal concentrations
tend to build up during the calculation. However, initial-value formulations are also
suitable for countercurrent design problems where either heavy nonkeys or light
nonkeys are entirely absent.
Effects of axial mixing can also be handled for cocurrent contactors in ways
analogous to those used for countercurrent contactors. Mecklenburgh and Hartland
(1975) present analytical solutions for a variety of cocurrent flow cases, using both
the differential and stagewise-backmixing models. For more complex situations, in-
volving curved equilibria, multicomponent systems, variable parameters, interacting
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 583
solutes, etc., block-tridiagonal-matrix approaches analogous to those for countercur-
rent contactors can be used; again, however, cocurrent systems are usually more
efficiently handled as initial-value problems, starting calculations from the feed end
(Mecklenburgh and Hartland, 1975).
DESIGN OF CONTINUOUS CROSSCURRENT CONTACTORS
Methods for the design and analysis of continuous crosscurrent contactors are a
logical extension of the methods for countercurrent and cocurrent contactors and
have been reviewed by Thibodeaux (1969).
FIXED-BED PROCESSES
Fixed-bed processes, such as adsorption, ion exchange, and column chromato-
graphy, can also be analyzed for concentration profiles and the separation obtained
using concepts of mass-transfer coefficients, transfer units, and axial mixing. Reviews
of approaches for the design and analysis of mass transfer in fixed-bed contactors are
given by Vermeulen et al. (1973), Vermeulen (1977), Giddings (1965), and Sherwood
et al. (1975, chap. 10).
SOURCES OF DATA
Data for kc, kL, and/or ku a and kL a in various gas-liquid and liquid-liquid contac-
tors are reported by Perry and Chilton (1973), along with various correlations.
Additional predictive methods are given by Sherwood et al. (1975, chap. 11), for
gas-liquid contactors, and by Hanson (1971) for extractors. Approaches for plate
contactors are covered in Chap. 12 of this book. Bolles and Fair (1979) evaluated
existing predictive methods for gas-liquid contacting in packed columns in the light
of a data bank of 545 experimental measurements; they also present an improved
correlation.
Vermeulen et al. (1966) and Hanson (1971) summarize data for axial mixing in
extraction devices. Additional data are given by Haug (1971) and Boyadzhiev and
Boyadjev (1973). Data for axial mixing in packed columns contacting gas and liquid
are given by Dunn et al. (1977), Woodburn (1974), and Stiegel and Shah (1977).
Mecklenburgh and Hartland (1975, chap. 2) show how to determine Peclet numbers
from experimental concentration profiles in countercurrent or cocurrent contactors.
Axial-mixing data are usually reported as Pe^ and Pe,., involving dp as the length
dimension. These can be converted into Pe^. and Pey for a given contactor height by
multiplying by h/dp.
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PROBLEMS
ll-A, Estimate the diffusion coefficients of (a) chlorine in nitrogen at 45°C and 150 kPa abs and
(/>) a-bin.nit- at high dilution in liquid water at 45°C and 500 kPa abs.
11-B, One process that has been suggested for food dehydration involves soaking pieces of the food in a
solvent, such as ethanol. and then boiling off the mixture of solvent and residual water under vacuum at
ambient temperatures (U.S. patent 3,298.199). One drawback of such a process is the relatively long time
required for the solvent to soak into the food and displace water. Suppose that ethanol is to be used as the
solvent for dehydration of pieces of steak, in the form of cubes 1.5 cm on a side. Steak contains about
65 vol "â water, which for purposes of this problem may be considered to be accessible by a nontortuous
path, so that the diffusivity is reduced to simply 65 percent of the free-liquid value.
586 SEPARATION PROCESSES
(a) Estimate the time required for displacement of 98 percent of the initial water. Assume an effective
diffusivity equal lo the arithmetic average of the two infinite-dilution values. Temperature = 25°C.
(b) Other than the slow rate, what drawbacks would you foresee for this process?
11-( Proceed to the nearest wash basin and turn on the water gently enough to give a sustained, laminar
flow. Assuming that the entering water contains no dissolved air, calculate a good estimate of the percent-
age aeration of the water impinging upon the basin at the bottom of the falling jet of water. Percentage
aeration is defined as 100 x [(average dissolved-air content)/(equilibrium dissolved-air content)]. Use as a
basis for the calculation whatever simple measurements and observations of the falling stream of water are
pertinent.
11-D2 The corrosion of copper in contact with aerated dilute sulfuric acid is believed to occur as follows:
2Cu + FT + 02 -2Cu* + HO2-
HOJ + 2Cu* + 3H* -2Cu2T + 2H2O
Various studies have shown thai the corrosion rate is rate-limited by mass transfer of dissolved oxygen to
the copper surface.
Consider the flow of an aerated. 10 wt °0 solution of sulfuric acid in water at 25°C through a long
copper pipe 5.00 cm in diameter. The inlet acid is equilibrated with air at atmospheric pressure
(101.3 kPa). and there is no nucleation of air bubbles within the pipe. The flow rate of acid is 1400 kg/h,
and operation is continuous.
Data Assume that the diffusivity of O2 in 10",, H2SO4 is the same as that in water. The viscosity of 10",,
H2SO4 at 25°C is 1.10mPa-s. The density of 10°0 H2SO4 at 25°C is 1064 kg/m3: that of copper is
8920 kg m3. The Bunsen coefficient for pure oxygen dissolved in 10",, H2SO4 is 0.0230 at 25°C. [The
Bunsen coefficient is the volume of gas (measured at 273 K and 101.3 kPa) which dissolves in one volume
of liquid at the temperature in question.]
Calculate the average corrosion rate of the copper pipe, expressed as millimeters per year.
11-E, Calcium sulfatc is the least soluble compound present in seawater which has been pretreated by
acidification to prevent deposition of CaCO3 and or Mg(OH)2. At ambient temperature, the solubility
limit of CaSO4 is reached when seawater becomes concentrated by a factor of 3.0 over the natural
concentration: see, for example, Lu and Fabuss (1968). Consider a reverse-osmosis process for desalina-
tion, in which seawater is recycled so that the feed contains seawater already concentrated by a factor of
1.5. Tubular membranes (2-mm diameter) are used, with the water in laminar flow through the tubes at a
Reynolds number of 200. The length-to-diameter ratio of the tubes is 50. for which it has been found that
the Leveque solution still describes the mass-transfer coefficient. The density of the seawater is
1060 kg m3. and the viscosity may be taken to be 1.1 mPa-s at the temperature of operation. The
diffusivity of CaSO4. calculated from the Nernst-Haskell equation neglecting the other salts, is
0.91 x 10 " m2 s.
(a) What location in the tubes will be most susceptible lo deposition of solid CaSO4 on the mem-
brane surface?
(b) For this critical location, what is the maximum water flux through the membrane that can occur
without deposition of CaSO4?
11-F2 Sherwood et al. (1967) studied liquid-phase mass-transfer limitations on the desalination of water
by reverse osmosis. The membrane was mounted on a porous rotating cylinder, with salt water outside the
cylinder and purified water withdrawn from the cylinder inside the membrane. The mass-transfer
coefficient in the salt solution adjacent to the membrane surface was varied by changing the rotation speed
of the cylinder. Figure 11-23 shows the water fluxes and product water compositions observed al various
cylinder rotation speeds for a feedwater containing 165 mol m3 NaCl. which gives an osmotic pressure of
0.773 MPa vs. pure water. The applied total-pressure difference across the membrane was 4.17 MPa.
(a) Why does the product-water salt content decrease with increasing stirrer speed?
(b) What is the cause of the apparent asymptotes for water flux and product-water salt contenl at
high stirrer speeds?
(c) Calculate ihe apparent mass-transfer coefficient kj( for salt between the membrane surface and
the bulk feed solution at 100 r min stirrer speed.
(d) What is the apparent value of the low-flux mass-transfer coefficient kc for salt at 100 r min stirrer
speed?
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 587
6.4
6.2
6.0
5.8
5.6
5.4
^
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
I
_L
I
I
II
I
Figure 11-23 Water flux and product-
water salt content vs. rotation speed for
cylinder-mounted membrane. (Adapted
from Sherwood et al., 1967, p. 10: used by
permission.)
200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600
Stirring speed, r/min
11-G2 Ultrafiltration is a membrane separation process in which solvent is removed from solutions
containing high-molecular-weight solutes such as proteins. The principle is similar to that of reverse
osmosis, in that pressure is applied to the solution on the feed side of a supported membrane and solvent
passes through the membrane. The high-molecular-weight solutes cannot pass through the membrane.
One difference from ordinary reverse osmosis is that the osmotic pressure caused by the solutes, even at high
concentrations, is usually felt to be negligible because of the high solute molecular weight. Another
difference is that the solutes may have only a limited solubility, so that a layer of precipitated solutes, or
gel, can readily form adjacent to the membrane surface on the feed side.
The performance of ultrafiltration devices has been successfully interpreted in terms of rate limita-
tions on the solvent flux due to the resistances to solvent flow from both the membrane itself and varying
thicknesses of gel or precipitated solutes on the surface of the membrane. The thickness of this gel layer
and its consequent resistance to solvent permeation represent a steady-state balance between the rate at
which solute is brought to the membrane surface by convection with the permeating solvent, on the one
hand, and the rate of mass transfer of solute back into the bulk feed solution, on the other; see. for
example. Porter, (1972).
Porter (1972) presents water fluxes (in cubic centimeters of water per minute and per square centi-
meter of membrane area) observed in a stirred ultrafiltration device of the sort shown in Fig. 11-24 when
the feeds were aqueous solutions containing varying concentrations of bovine serum albumin; these data
are shown in Fig. 11-25. In the case of 0.9°0 saline solution (equivalent to the albumin solutions with zero
concentration of albumin) the membrane was sufficiently "open" for nothing to be retained; the salt
passes freely through the membrane with the water.
(a) In terms of the steady-state thickness of accumulated albumin gel, explain whv the flux curves in
588 SEPARATION PROCESSES
^ ) Stirrer
Pressure!
AHh-
1
d solution
Concentrat
0
o
w
Pure solvent
(ultrafiltrate)
Figure 11-24 Ultrafiltration de-
0.10
Figure 11-25 Ultrafiltration fluxes for aqueous bovine serum albumin solutions. (From Porter, 1972,
p. 235: used by permission.)
MASS-TRANSFER RATES 589
Fig. 11-25 reach a horizontal asymptote at high transmembrane pressure drops; i.e., once this asymptote is
reached, why can't more pressure drop give more water flux? The water flux is NWVW, the ultimate
solubility of the protein is cAf, the feed concentration of protein is cAf-. and the mass-transfer coefficient of
albumin at the membrane surface is kjt.
(h) For the 6.5°,, albumin feed, why is the water flux at 1830 r/min higher than that at 880 r/min?
(c) Using the film model to allow for high-flux effects, derive an analytical expression relating the
water-permeation flux in the presence of a gel layer to the following variables and no others: the low-flux
mass-transfer coefficient for albumin kc, the solubility of albumin c A8, and the concentration of albumin in
the bulk feed solution cAf.
(d) Using the result of part (c) and the observed water fluxes at 1830 r/min for both 3.9 and 6.5",,
albumin in the feed, estimate CA,. Assume that A, is unaffected by any changes in viscosity or diffusivity
which come from changing albumin concentration and assume that Pw is independent of solute
concentration.
11-H2 A short packed column is used to remove dissolved gases from a downflowing water stream by
desorption into upflowing air. Consider the airflow rate, the water flow rate, the temperature, and the
pressure to be constant. In one case the inlet water contains a small amount ofdissolved ammonia, and in
another case the inlet water contains a small amount ofdissolved carbon dioxide. Both situations corre-
spond to less than 0.1 percent dissolved gas in the water. The airflow is sufficient for the desorbed gases not
to build up to a level that is significant compared with the equilibrium partial pressure over the aqueous
solution. Do you expect that the percentage removal ofdissolved ammonia will be greater or less than the
percentage removal for the carbon dioxide or that they will be about the same? Explain your answer. Note
that this is a qualitative problem, not seeking a quantitative answer.
11-I3 Drops of sucrose solution are being dried in a spray at atmospheric (101.3 kPa) pressure. Assume
that the drops are spherical and noncirculating from the start of the drying process and that they do not
move relative to the air phase. The drop temperature is 25°C, and the effective drop diameter is 60 ^im.
Assume that sucrose solutions obey Raoult's law and that the partial molal volumes of sucrose and water
are constant and equal to the pure-component volumes. The molecular weight of sucrose is 342. and its
density is 1588 kg/m3. The vapor pressure of water at 25°C is 3170 Pa. Henrion (1964) reports diffusivities
of sucrose in water at 25°C to be 0.54 x 10~9 m2/s at high dilution of sucrose in water, and 0.21 x
10~9 m2/s at 45 wt "â sucrose in water.
For evaporation of water from (a) a 0.1 wt ",, solution of sucrose in water and (h) a 45 wt "..solution
of sucrose in water indicate which phase is rate-limiting for mass transfer and find the time required for the
removal of the first 2 percent of the water present, assuming that the diffusivity is uniform throughout the
drop.
11-J2 Freeze-drying of foods removes water by sublimation, i.e., direct transition of water from ice to
water vapor. The process is usually carried out by loading frozen food particles batchwise into large
shallow trays stacked in a vacuum chamber. Heat for the sublimation is supplied by conduction and
radiation from heating platens, on which the trays rest. The water vapor evolved is taken up as solid ice on
chilled condenser tubes or plates, on the side of or outside the drying chamber. As drying occurs, a frozen
core retreats inward within each particle. This core is surrounded by a nearly dry layer, through which
incoming heat must be conducted and through which outgoing water vapor must pass.
Drying rates are slow, with particles 1.0 cm in size typically taking 4 h or more to dry. The drying
rate is limited by one of two constraints: (1) the frozen core must not exceed its apparent melting point
Tf. â¢Â». a"d (2) Ihc outer, dry particle surface cannot exceed whatever temperature will cause thermal
damage to it 7^ mn. The typical absolute pressure range in the dryer is 10 to 100 Pa.
There may or may not be a short constant-rate period at the start of a drying cycle. Subsequently the
rate continually decreases throughout the cycle as ice is sublimed. Measured values of Tf and Ts tend to be
relatively constant during this period, however. For relatively low chamber pressures, the rate of heat
input is typically limited by the constraint involving T5 â,â, and 7} is close to the condenser temperature. If
the total pressure is raised by allowing inerts to accumulate in the chamber, Tf rises above the condenser
temperature and the drying rate becomes limited by the 7} mm, constraint above some critical pressure,
often about 1.3 kPa. As the total pressure is further increased toward atmospheric, the rate typically drops,
in approximate inverse proportion to pressure. The drying rate in kilograms per hour at these higher
pressures is usually independent of the particle loading density on the trays and the particle size.
590 SEPARATION PROCESSES
(a) Explain what causes the rate to decrease throughout the drying cycle even though Tf and T, are
relatively constant.
(b) What is the rate-limiting factor for drying at low total pressures?
(c) What appears to be the rate-limiting factor at higher pressures? Explain how this factor is
consistent with the observed effects of pressure, particle size, and loading density.
((/) Suggest a design change to accelerate drying at higher total pressures.
(e) Microwave heating has been suggested and confirmed as a way of accelerating rates of freeze
drying at lower chamber pressures. Why could it provide a higher rate? (If necessary, consult a reference to
determine the physical basis of microwave heating.)
11-K, Rework Prob. 6-C if a packed column is used, with a height of 2.1 m and (HTU),,, = 0.30 m. Axial
dispersion is negligible.
Ill Repeat Prob. 5-B, if the distillation is to be carried out in a packed column providing
(HTU)OC = 0.46 m.
11-Mj An absorption tower packed with 2.5-cm Raschig rings is to be designed to recover NO2 from a
gas stream which is essentially air at atmospheric pressure (101.3 kPa). containing fixed nitrogen as both
NO2 and N,O4. Dilute NaOH solution will be used as the absorbing liquid. The mechanism by which
nitrogen dioxide. NO2. is absorbed by water and dilute caustic solution can be described by the reactions
2NO2^N2O4 gas phase
N2O4(g)^N2O4(/) Henry's law equilibrium
N2O4 + H2O - HNO2 + HNOj liquid phase
In the case of dilute caustic, the acids are rapidly neutralized as they are formed.
Many investigators have established that the rate of absorption is directly proportional to the partial
pressure of N2O4 at the gas-liquid interface. In water and in dilute caustic solution the hydrolysis occurs at
a finite rate and is pseudo first order and reversible. The gas-phase reaction is so rapid that NO2 and
N2O4 are always in equilibrium. At 25°C the equilibrium constant is 6.5 x 10~* Pa~' ( = pN,0. TNO,)-
Wendel and Pigford (1958) used a short wetted-wall column 8.72cm long and 2.54cm ID to
investigate the absorption of NO2 by water. At 25° they found an absorption rate of 1.2 x 10"2 g atom of
fixed nitrogen per second and per square meter for an interfacial partial pressure of N2O4 of 1010 Pa, in
equilibrium with 3950 Pa of NO2. This rate of absorption was found to be independent of both gas and
liquid flow rates.
Yoshida and Miura (1963) have shown for the dilute caustic-air system at a liquid flow of
2.71 kgm2 -s and a gas flow of 0.39 kgm2 -s that the total gas-liquid interfacial area for 2.5-cm Raschig
rings is 73 m2 per cubic meter of packing.
(a) In the short wetted-wall column, why is the rate of absorption independent of both gas and liquid
flow rates?
(h) Estimate the height of packing required to reduce the concentration of NO2 in an airstream at
25°C from 1 to 0.2 mole percent if the liquid and gas flows are 2.71 and 0.39 kg m2 -s, respectively (per
tower cross-sectional area). It is important to recognize that the transferring species here is different from
the principal form of nitrogen oxide in the gas phase.
(c) The height calculated in part (b) is large for the relatively modest NO2 removal achieved. As a
good engineer, what suggestions do you have for improving the process?
11-N2 Suppose that a packed column is used to humidify air by contact with water. The water rapidly
reaches the wet-bulb temperature and remains isothermal throughout the column. For the flow conditions
and packing size (2.5 cm) used. Dunn et al. (1977) report Pe, and Pe|. equal to 0.14 and 1.0. respectively.
Suppose that independent experiments have shown that the value of (HTU)OC for these conditions is
0.30 m, axial dispersion being allowed for properly. Calculate the packing height required to bring the
airstream from an initial water-vapor content of zero up to 99.8 percent of the partial pressure correspond-
ing to equilibrium with the water at the wet-bulb temperature.
CHAPTER
TWELVE
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES;
STAGE EFFICIENCY
Most of the discussion so far has been concerned with means of determining the
product compositions from a separation device employing one or more contacting
stages or with means of determining the stage requirement for a given degree of
separation. For separations based upon contacting immiscible phases it is often
assumed that each stage provides equilibrium between the product streams or that a
stage efficiency is used to account for the lack of equilibrium. In addition to stage
efficiency, which we have not yet considered, another important design parameter is
the throughput capacity of a stage or contacting device of a given size, which is the
amount of feed that can be processed per unit time. Alternatively, we may want to
ascertain the size of a given type of contacting device, diameter of a column, etc.,
necessary to process a given amount of feed per unit time.
Stage efficiency and throughput capacity are related variables since they both
reflect the internal configuration of the contacting device. In a distillation tower they
are both influenced by the nature of the trays used, the weir height, the tray spacing
etc.; in a mixer-settler contactor they are both influenced by the stirrer speed and the
settler geometry. Hence it is appropriate to consider factors influencing efficiency and
capacity together, and that is the purpose of this chapter.
FACTORS LIMITING CAPACITY
Most contacting devices fall into some one of the following categories of flow
configuration: (1) countercurrent flow, (2) crosscurrent flow, (3) cocurrent flow, and
(4) well-mixed vessel. Although the same basic factors influence capacity for these
591
592 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Liquid in
Gas out
Gas in
Liquid oul
Figure 12-1 Countercurreni packed col-
umn for gas-liquid contact.
different flow configurations, we shall see that their relative importance can vary
widely from situation to situation. Attention will be focused, however, on countercur-
rent plate and packed columns.
Flooding
Any countercurrent-flow separation device is subject to a capacity limitation due to
flooding. The phenomenon is related to the ability of the two phases to flow in
sufficient quantity in opposite directions past each other within the confines of the
contacting device. If we consider the countercurrent packed gas-liquid contacting
column shown in Fig. 12-1, we find that the gas phase will pass upward through the
column under the impetus of a pressure drop necessitated by friction and form drag
against both the packing and the falling liquid. The liquid must fall downward
against this pressure drop under the impetus of gravitational force. Generally a
packed tower is designed or operated to provide a certain ratio of phase flows, i.e., a
fixed L/V, corresponding to a set reflux ratio in distillation or a set solvent-to-gas
ratio in absorption. For a tower of given diameter, as the flow rates are increased, the
gas pressure drop will increase because of a greater drag force against the packing
and the falling liquid. At some point the pressure drop will become so great that it
balances the gravity head for liquid flow. At this point the liquid cannot fall down
through the packing at a rate equal to the desired feed rate. As a result, a layer of
liquid builds up above the packing and the gas flow is seriously reduced and may
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 593
surge with respect to time. The tower has become unstable and cannot handle the
feed rates. A larger-diameter tower is necessary.
To allow for unavoidable variations in flow rate and to provide some extra
capacity, countercurrent towers are usually designed to operate at 50 to 85 percent of
their flooding limit. Too low a velocity will require a more expensive tower and can
result in channeling, which gives ineffective contacting between the phases. Hence the
design throughputs are usually not removed by more than a factor of 2 from a
controlling flooding limit.
Packed columns A flooding correlation (Sherwood et al., 1938; Leva, 1954; Peters
and Timmerhaus, 1968) for gas-liquid contacting in packed towers is shown in
Fig. 12-2. Note that the capacity is higher for a tower containing regularly stacked
packing of the same type and voidage than for one containing randomly dumped
packing. This follows from the greater continuity of the flow channels for regularly
stacked packing. Note also that the flooding gas mass flow rate per unit area G
increases with decreasing L/C ratio, with decreasing liquid viscosity (film thickness),
-
:=5
^
0.6
1 -â¢
0.4
1
Blooding w
ndom pack
th ' -H
^
â¢^
ra
ing
x
â¢â
Flo<
Kill
wi
:k
th
0.2
g
r*..
â¢N.
. stack
\
cd
-s.
>a
ng
''X.
0.10
⢠' ^^»j
0.06
0.04
â
'»,
«^j
"s
tfct
s
\
\
Sd
»
\
\
0.02
0.010
i
Lower limit for
loading with
random packing
594 SEPARATION PROCESSES
with increasing voidage. and with decreasing packing surface area. These trends are
all in accord with the picture of flooding being caused by the drag of the gas upon the
packing and the falling liquid. The loading curve in Fig. 12-2 represents the point at
which the pressure drop starts to increase more rapidly with increasing G than it does
at lower gas flows.
Plate columns Flooding also will occur at too high a vapor velocity for gas-liquid
contacting in a plate column. In this case flooding occurs because the tray-to-tray
pressure drop and the liquid flow rate are so large that the downcomers cannot pass
the liquid from tray to tray without causing the liquid level in the downcomers to
exceed the tray spacing. Flooding capacities of gas-liquid contacting plate columns
are usually analyzed through use of the Souders-Brown equation
PL - Pa
PG
(12-1)
where t/nood is the flooding gas velocity in cubic feet of gas per second and per square
foot of active tray area (tower cross-sectional area minus downcomer cross-sectional
areas, inlet and outlet) and K,, is a "constant" related to a large number of variables.
Figure 12-3 shows a correlation (Fair and Matthews, 1958; Van Winkle, 1967; Fair,
1973) of K,. vs. tray spacing, L/G and density ratio for sieve plates and bubble-cap
plates. Note that the flooding vapor velocity increases with decreasing L/G and with
increasing tray spacing, as indicated by the flooding mechanism for plate towers.
The correlation of Fig. 12-3 should be used only for a first approximation of the
flooding limit. A more comprehensive design will allow for all the factors influencing
⢠«.
D.O.I
0.01
Figure 12-3 Flooding limits for bubble-cap and perforated plates. Notation is given in Fig. 12-2 and in
text. (Adapted from Fair and Matthews, 1958, p. 153: used by permission.)
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 595
1U
T
Downcomer apron .
Tray below s
\
Froth
(foam)
Figure 12-4 Tray-dynamics schematic diagram for froth regime. ( Adapted from Holies and Fair, 1963,
p. 542 : used by permission.)
tray-to-tray pressure drop (see below) and all the factors causing liquid to back up in
the downcomer. Such an analysis is described for the froth regime by Fair (1973),
Peters and Timmerhaus (1968), and Van Winkle (1967), among others. The factors
to be considered are summarized in Fig. 12-4: the liquid backup in the downcomer,
expressed as a height H of clear liquid is given by
H = h, + P'hw + how + A + hda (12-2)
where h, = tray-to-tray pressure drop, expressed as height of clear liquid [see
Eq. (12-4)]
hw = weir height
/?' = aeration factor for dispersion adjacent to the weir (= vol. fraction liquid;
/?' < 1); Fair (1973) tacitly assumes ft = 1.
how = clear liquid crest over weir (hlo in Fig. 12-4 = (i'hw + how)
A = hydraulic gradient across tray, hti â hio, expressed as clear-liquid height
difference, A/7,
hda = friction head loss for flow through downcomer and under downcomer
apron
By "clear" liquid height we mean the height to which the aerated froth would
settle if the gas in the froth were somehow removed. h,0 and hu are values of ht
(shown in Fig. 12-4) at either end of the liquid flow path.
5% SEPARATION PROCESSES
100,000
7
5
10,000
7
5
1000
7
5
3
2
100
1 2 3 5 7 10 23 57 100 23 37 1000
Figure 12-5 Flooding Tor liquid-liquid contacting in a packed tower, where n = interfacial tension,
lb/h2; p, = density of continuous phase, lb/ft3; fte = viscosity of continuous phase, Ib/ft-h; &p = density
difference between phases, lb/ft3; a, = (surface area of dry packing)/(unil tower volume), ft ' ; E = voidage
of dry packing; Vcr = flow rate of continuous phase, ft3/h-(ft2 empty tower cross-sectional area); and
VDf = flow rate of dispersed phase, ft3/h-(ft2 empty tower cross-sectional area). < Adapted from Crawford
and Wilke, 1951, p. 428; used by permission.)
Usual design practice calls for the downcomer liquid height H (based upon
clear-liquid density) during operation to be 50 percent or less of the tray spacing.
This is necessary since the liquid will be aerated with a significant fraction of vapor in
the upper portion of the downcomer.
Liquid-liquid contacting For liquid-liquid contacting in counterflow systems, differ-
ent flooding correlations and analyses are required because of the greater similarity
of densities of the two phases. Figure 12-5 shows a correlation for flooding during
liquid-liquid contacting in counterflow packed columns (see also Treybal, 1963).
Notice that the phase velocities possible without flooding increase with decreasing
packing surface area, increasing voidage. increasing density difference between
phases, and decreasing interfacial tension, as would be expected from a consideration
of flooding mechanism.
Flooding analyses for liquid-liquid contacting in other types of countercurrent
apparatus often require a more fundamental consideration of drop dynamics within
the system (Treybal, 1963, 1973).
Entrainment
Entrainment is the incomplete physical separation of product phases from each
other. In a plate tower for gas-liquid contacting the gas stream rising to the tray
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 597
above may sweep liquid droplets along with it, thus entraining liquid to the stage
above. In a mixer-settler contactor, if the settler is undersized, there will be drops or
bubbles of either phase entrained in the other. Entrainment often represents a capa-
city limit in separation devices, both because of its detrimental effect upon stage
efficiency and because it increases the interstage flows above those which would
occur with no entrainment. Hence entrainment in a distillation tower can increase
the downward liquid flow so much that it causes flooding of the downcomers.
Plate columns Figure 12-6 shows a correlation of the available data for entrainment
in bubble-cap and sieve-plate gas-liquid contracting columns (Fair and Matthews,
1958; Fair, 1973; Bolles and Fair, 1963). The entrainment is expressed as ip, moles of
entrained liquid per mole of gross downflowing liquid (net flow plus return of
entrainment). The parameter (percent of flood) is the actual vapor velocity divided
by the flooding vapor velocity at the same L/G. Entrainment increases with decreas-
ing tray spacing; this effect is accounted for in Fig. 12-6 by making the "percent
of flood" a function of tray spacing (Fig. 12-3).
o
£
t
c
-o
â a-
e
-_)
E
Io
0-
0I
o
E
0.02
S 0.01
0.002
0.001
"Flood, perce
ni
1 III II
â-fl
*>â¢
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Bi
ri
. ..
Sfc
[fS,
*
>
>
.jj
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598 SEPARATION PROCESSES
The rate of entrainment increases sharply with increasing tower loading: hence it
is dangerous to operate under conditions where the amount of entrainment is
substantial, lest an aberration from normal operating conditions cause the amount of
entrainment to be so great that loss of product purity and/or flooding of the tower
result. An upper limit of i// = 0.15 is probably advisable for this purpose, and i//
should usually be substantially less.
Another interesting point can be made from Fig. 12-6: entrainment is a more
important limiting factor for low values of the group (L/G)(pG/pL)* 2. At the higher
values of this group, flooding is approached at vapor velocities well below those
where entrainment becomes important, but for lower values of the group entrain-
ment will become serious before Hooding is approached. Flooding is the more impor-
tant limit for high L G and for high-pressure columns (high p(;). Entrainment is most
important in vacuum columns. The greater tendency toward entrainment at low L/G
or low pressure probably relates to the dispersion becoming gas-continuous, rather
than liquid-continuous (spray regime vs. froth regimeâsee below).
Another phenomenon related to entrainment in plate columns is priming, where-
in the dispersion height on a plate becomes so high that it fills the space between
trays and causes the liquid from the tray below to come through the perforations
or caps and mix with the liquid on the tray above. The greatest tendency toward
priming occurs for naturally foamy liquids and or small tray spacings. Van Winkle
(1967) discusses criteria for avoiding priming, the simplest being
t'M1 2 < 2-3 (12-3)
where UG is gas velocity (ft3 s ⢠ft2 active area) and pG is gas density (Ib ft3).
The effect of entrainment on the separation obtained is usually taken into
account by including it in the stage efficiency. Alternatively, entrainment can be
included in the mass-balance equations (10-2), which then retain their tridiagonal
form (Loud and Waggoner. 1978).
Pressure Drop
Another factor closely related to capacity is the pressure drop within the contacting
device. This pressure drop generally will necessitate pump or compressor work at
some point outside the separation vessel. In a vacuum system there will be some
upper limit to the possible pressure drop within the device, which will often represent
the controlling capacity limit: e.g.. the pressure drop in a column cannot exceed the
total pressure at the bottom. Also, as we have seen in Eq. (12-2), the tray-to-tray
pressure drop is an important contributor to the liquid height in the downcomer of a
plate tower, and hence a large pressure drop can cause flooding.
Packed columns A pressure-drop correlation for countercurrent gas-liquid contact-
ing in packed columns (Leva, 1954; Fair, 1973) is shown in Fig. 12-7. The coordin-
ates are the same as those in the flooding correlation for plate towers shown in
Fig. 12-2. The curves marked .4 and B delineate the zone o( loading, defined above.
Notice that the pressure drop begins to increase more rapidly with increasing G in
the loading region and increases still more rapidly as flooding is approached.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 599
~
1.000
0.600
0.400
0.200
0.100
0.060
0.040
0.020
0.010
0.006
0.004
0.002
0.02 0.04 0.10 0.2 0.4 0.6 1.0 2.0 4.0 6.0
m
Figure 12-7 Generalized pressure-drop correlation for randomly packed, irrigated columns. Notation
identical to that for Fig. 12-2. (Adapted from Leva. 1954. p. 57; used hy permission.)
tlâ1 1 1 I Millâ| Mill"
ii i i 1111ii i i i i 11
⢠J'
â 2.5
drop. in. H ,0 ft
|1
()«.
15
-I
lo
odinj
! line
B»-
. U.il^^
1T:>25
vl
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0.2
>
sj,
(1
10-
vtva
1
i.
- - > ijf 1
oa
di
ng /
one
0,
II
III
h1
Plate columns The pressure drop from tray to tray in a plate column is made up of a
number of contributing factors. Referring to Fig. 12-4 and the notation under
Eq. (12-2). we find that the tray-to-tray pressure drop //, expressed as height of clear
liquid is given by a sum of terms reflecting static head and additional factors
h, = P'hw + how + i A + hF
(12-4)
where hr is the pressure drop due to gas flow through the gas-dispersing unit (the
600 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Notice that the terms representing h,a in Fig. 12-4 contribute doubly to the liquid
backup.
Pressure drop is discussed in more detail by Davy and Haselden (1975) for sieve
trays and by Thorngren (1972) and Bolles (1976a) for valve trays.
Residence Time for Good Efficiency
Yet another factor which can govern the size of a contacting device or limit the
throughput of a device of given size is the fluid residence time required for an
adequate stage efficiency. In the following discussion of efficiencies it will be apparent
that higher efficiencies are gained, in general, by allowing the contacting phases to
stay in the contacting device longer. As flow rates through a stage increase, the stage
efficiency usually decreases and a point is eventually reached where the stage
efficiency becomes so low that the stage or series of stages cannot provide the degree
of separation required. This shortcoming is evidenced by unsatisfactory product
purities. Poor product purities can also be caused by entrainment, priming, and
flooding, in addition to inadequate residence times.
Flow Regimes; Sieve Trays
The flow situation on a plate for vapor-liquid contacting is one of intense agitation
and phase dispersion. A typical view is shown in Fig. 12-8, from which it is apparent
that it would be very difficult to describe the hydrodynamics by any simple model.
Figure 12-8 A view of typical vapor-liquid contacting on a sieve tray. (Fractiimalion Research. Inc..
South Pasadena, California.)
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 601
Most analyses of tray hydraulics and efficiencies have been based on the concept
of an aerated liquid froth flowing across the tray, as shown schematically in Fig. 12-4.
More recently, it has been established that many commercial sieve trays operate
instead in a spray regime. The dispersion in the spray regime is mostly vapor-
continuous, while in the froth regime it is liquid-continuous (Fane and Sawistowski,
1969; Porter and Wong, 1969; Pinczewski and Fell, 1974). Transition between the
regimes appears to be associated with the change from chain bubble formation to
more steady jetting of vapor at the holes in a tray (Pinczewski et al., 1973). The
transition from the froth regime to the spray regime is favored by high gas velocities
and gas densities, larger holes, and greater fraction hole area in the tray (Pinczewski
and Fell, 1972; Loonet al., 1973). These are also the current directional trends in tray
design.
Trends in tray operating characteristics undergo changes with the transition
from the froth to the spray regime. Although tray pressure drop continues to increase
with increasing vapor velocity, the difference between the wet and dry tray pressure
drops tends to decrease in the spray regime while increasing or staying relatively
constant with increasing vapor velocity in the froth regime. Entrainment is more
severe and varies more sharply with vapor velocity in the spray regime, reflecting a
change from a mechanism of vapor drag on droplets in the froth regime to a mechan-
ism of sustained droplet inertia in the spray regime. As a result, the entrainment
correlation given in Fig. 12-6 is less reliable in the spray than in the froth regime
(Pinczewski et al., 1975). Regular oscillations of the vapor-liquid dispersion back
and forth across small-diameter sieve trays have been observed under some con-
ditions (Biddulph and Stephens, 1974; Biddulph, 1975a); one such oscillation pattern
has been associated with the transition from the froth regime to the spray regime
(Pinczewski and Fell, 1975).
Range of Satisfactory Operation
Plate columns The capacity limits mentioned so far place an upper limit upon the
flow rates allowable within a separation device. There usually will be some factors
which place lower limits on the flows too. Figure 12-9 shows schematically the zone
of satisfactory operation of a sieve tray for gas-liquid contacting, along with the
range of flows in which various different factors can cause unsatisfactory perfor-
mance (Bolles and Fair, 1963). The coordinates of Fig. 12-9 are similar to those of
Figs. 12-3 and 12-7.
As we have already seen, for most values of (L/G)(pG/pL)1 2 the capacity limit
coming from too high a vapor rate will be flooding. For low (L/G)(pG/pL)"2, such as
for vacuum towers, the capacity limit corresponding to too high a vapor rate comes
from entrainment. At very high vapor velocities and relatively low L/G, the efficiency
may drop markedly because of blowing, wherein the tray is blown clear of liquid in
the immediate vicinity of the vapor distributors. When L/G is high, the quantity of
liquid flow across the plate may require a very high liquid gradient in order to drive
the flow. In such a case A = hti â /ito in Fig. 12-4 will be quite large, with possible
tendencies toward flooding [Eq. (12-5)] or too high a pressure drop [Eq. (12-4)].
Another result of too high a liquid gradient can be phase maldistribution, wherein the
602 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Blowing
Flooding
Weeping
Phase maldistribution
Liquid gradient
Dumping
L_
c;
Figure 12-9 Effects of vapor and liquid loadings on sieve-tray performance. (From Holies and Fair. 1963.
p. 556: used by permission.)
vapor flows preferentially through the perforations near the liquid outlet and the
liquid flows in part downward through the perforations near the liquid inlet where
the liquid depth is greatest. This flow of liquid downward through the perforations
rather than through the downcomer is known, somewhat colorfully, as weeping and
is favored by relatively low gas-phase flow rates where the gas velocity in the perfora-
tions is not large enough to hold the liquid out of the perforations. Massive weeping,
known as dumping, results in particularly severe phase maldistribution. Within the
shaded range of satisfactory operation, the upper portion corresponds to the spray
regime and the lower to the froth regime.
The problem of a high liquid gradient is particularly severe for plate columns of
large diameter, where there is a long liquid flow path across a plate. One way to
prevent a large liquid gradient is to use a split-flow tray. As shown in Fig. 12-10a and
h. split flow involves dividing the liquid flow in half on each tray, with a central
(a)
(b)
«t\
Figure 12-10 Liquid flow patterns for reducing detrimental effects of hydraulic gradient: split flow in
(a) top and (h) side view, and cascade cross flow in (c) top and (d) side view. (From Pelers and
Timmi-rhaus. 1968, p. 6/2, used b\ permission.)
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES: STAGE EFFICIENCY 603
Figure 12-11 A 2.9-m-diameter split-flow tray containing type V-l ballast caps, also known as valve caps.
f Fritz W. Glitsch & Sons, Inc., Dallas, Texas.)
downcomer and two side downcomers on alternate trays (Peters and Timmerhaus,
1968). Figure 12-11 shows a split-flow valve-cap tray. Multipass trays extend the
split-flow concept by dividing the liquid into more than two portions, using multiple
downcomers. Bolles (1976b) discusses good design practices for split-flow and mul-
tipass trays. Another approach for minimizing detrimental gradient effects is the use
of cascade trays, as shown in Fig. 12-lOc and d. In this case the liquid flows from one
level to another along a tray, and the lengths of continuous liquid flow paths are
shortened. Figure 12-12 shows a 12-m-diameter cascade tray during assembly. Still
other techniques for overcoming flow maldistributions associated with hydraulic
gradients on large-diameter trays are the use of bubbling promoters at the liquid inlet
and slotted trays which direct the vapor flow horizontally in the direction of liquid
flow. These modifications are described by Weiler et al. (1973) and Smith and Del-
nicki (1975).
The allowable range of vapor velocities in a tower is indicated by the turndown
ratio, which is the ratio of the maximum allowable vapor velocity to the minimum
allowable vapor velocity. For sieve trays this ratio is approximately 3 (Bolles and
Fair. 1963; Gerster, 1963; Zuiderweg et al., 1960; Hengstebeck. 1961).
Some of the additional practical factors which enter into tray selection and
column design (accessibility, supports, etc.) are discussed by Interess (1971). Frank
(1977) discusses a number of different aspects of tray design.
604 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Figure 12-12 Assembly of a 12-m-diameter cascade tray containing ballast, or valve caps. The bottom
portion of the plate, grid and matting, is a mist eliminator to remove entrainment from the vapors rising
from below. (Frit: W. Glilach & Sons, Inc.. Dallas. Texas.)
Comparison of Performance
There have been relatively few comprehensive comparisons of the capacity and
efficiency of various types of plates and packing for gas-liquid contacting. One excep-
tion is the study reported by Zuiderweget al. (I960), in which efficiency and capacity
measurements were made for four different types of plate (bubble-cap, valve, sieve.
and Kittel) and two types of packing (Spraypak and Pall rings) in a 46-cm-diameter
column with a 41-cm tray spacing and 7.6-cm weir height, carrying out a benzene-
toluene distillation at total reflux.
Table 12-1 shows a qualitative comparison of the suitability of various types of
trays and packings by different criteria. The counterflow trays included in the table
are downcomerless trays, such as Turbogrid, ripple, and Kittel trays. High-void
packings include Pall rings and grid packing, while "normal" packings include
Raschig rings, Berl and Intalox saddles, etc. (see Figs. 4-14 and 4-15). Table 12-2
shows a comparison of trays and packings with regard to more specific service needs
and includes tower internals of the alternating disk and doughnut type.
Zuiderweg et al. (1960) found the stage efficiencies of bubble-cap, sieve, and
valve-cap trays to be very nearly the same. Others (Hengstebeck, 1961; Lockhart and
Leggett, 1958; Procter, 1963) have reported that sieve trays and valve trays provide a
stage efficiency 10 to 20 percent above that of bubble-cap trays at optimal column
loadings. The performances of sieve trays and valve trays have been compared by
Bolles (1976a) and Anderson et al. (1976). Another important factor is cost. Valve
trays and sieve trays cost about 50 to 70 percent as much as bubble-cap trays,
installed (Gerster. 1963; Hengstebeck, 1961). Valve trays and sieve trays are the most
common trays used currently for new column construction.
Several other important differences between plate and packed towers should be
Table 12-1 Relative performance ratingst of contacting devices for distillation
Trays
Packings
Bubble-cap
Sieve
Valve
Counterflow
High-void
Normal
Vapor capacity
3
4
4
4
5
2
Liquid capacity
4
4
4
5
5
3
Efficiency (separation
per unit column
height)
3
4
4
4
5
2
Flexibility
(turndown ratio)
5
3
5
1
2
2
Pressure drop
3
4
4
4
5
2
Cost
3
5
4
5
1
3
Design reliability,
based on published
literature
4
4
3}
2
2
3
t 5 = excellent; 4 = very good; 3 = good: 2 = fair; 1 = poor.
J Probably better now (1978).
Source: From Fair and Bolles, 1968; used by permission.
Table 12-2 Selection guidet for distillation-column internals
Sieve or Disk and
valve Bubble-cap Counterflow Random Stacked doughnut
Trays
606 SEPARATION PROCESSES
brought out, in addition to those indicated in Tables 12-1 and 12-2. Plate columns
tend to have a greater liquid holdup per unit tower volume than packed columns.
This can be of value when a slow liquid-phase chemical reaction is involved. The
total weight of a dry plate tower is usually less than that of a dry packed column, but
if the liquid holdup during operation is taken into account, the weights are usually
about the same. The construction of a plate column is such that stage efficiencies
most often fall in the range of 50 to 90 percent (see below), with the result that the
proportion of tower height to equivalent equilibrium stages does not vary widely for
many common distillations. The height of a packed column equivalent to an equili-
brium stage varies more widely and often becomes greater for larger tower diameters
because of liquid-distribution problems. When large temperature changes are in-
volved, as in many distillations, there is the threat of thermal expansion or contrac-
tion crushing the packing in packed towers. Finally, packed columns often provide
less pressure drop than plate columns for a given separation (Tables 12-1 and 12-2).
This advantage, plus the fact that the packing serves to lessen the possibility of
tower-wall collapse, makes packed towers particularly useful for vacuum operations
(top row of Table 12-2).
Large-scale comparison studies of different trays and packings are made by
Fractionation Research, Inc. (FRI). So. Pasadena, California, but the results are
confidential to companies which subscribe fo FRI. Another large-scale comparative
testing facility has been built at the University of Manchester in Great Britain
(Standart, 1972).
Example 12-1 Consider the acetone-water distillation specified in Examples 6-4 and 6-5:
dr
- = 0.538 =0.298 A V across feed tray = 0.55F
Pressure = 1 aim abs Overhead temperature = 135°F Bottoms temperature = 186°F
Assume that the feed flow rate is to be 500 Ib mol h. Estimate the lower diameter required if the
distillation is carried out in (a) a sieve-plate column with a tray spacing of 24 in and (b) a packed
column containing 1-in ceramic Raschig rings randomly dumped.
SOLUTION As a preliminary- step, it is important to determine the point in the column at which a
capacity limit is most likely to occur. From Example 6-5 we know that the liquid and vapor flows
decrease downward in the column. The vapor load in the rectifying section is greater than that in the
stripping section, but the liquid load is less. The vapor density is least at the bottom of the column
where the water-vapor mole fraction is highest and the temperature is greatest. Because of these
competing factors, it is a good idea to calculate (L V)(p0 p,Y 2 and l'(pG)~ ' 2 a< 'he tower top. just
above the feed, jusl below the feed, and at the tower bottom. The first of these factors is the abscissa
of Figs. 12-2 and 12-3. while the second is proportional to the ordinate of these figures and contains
those variables which change most. At the tower top
L = (0.29X)(0.538)(500) = 80 Ib mol h f = (1.298)(0.538)(500) = 349 Ib mol h
Since the molecular weight of acetone is 58,
1 492
,)â = [(0.91)(58) + (0.09)(18)] â ~ =0.126 Ib ft3
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 607
Since the specific gravity of acetone is 0.791 and the density of water is 61 lb/ft3 at 160°F (Weast,
1968)
61[(0.91X58) + (0.09)(18)]
' [(0.91)(58)/0.791] + [(0.09)(18)/1.00]
LipoV2 80/0.126\"2
= =a°117
(1 \12 1 = 981 Ib mol/h-(ft3/lb)12
The flows just above and below the feed and at the tower bottom can be obtained from Fig. 6-16. The
term Ha,,, for the stripping section has been set at -4700 Btu/lb mol. At the feed point the passing
vapor and liquid streams have compositions of >-A = 0.775 and .XA = 0.170. The enthalpies of these
streams are + 13.900 and -1000 Btu/lb mol, respectively. Since b = (0.462)(500) = 231 Ib mol/h, we
have, just below the feed,
£-V = 231 and (- 1000)z: - (13,900)F = (-4700)(231)
Solving, we find
L = 288 Ib mol/h and V = 57 Ib mol/h
Similarly, just above the feed tray,
L = 63 Ib mol/h and V = 332 Ib mol/h
The flows just above the reboiler have compositions >'A = 0.45 and .XA = 0.10. By the above type of
analysis.
L = 284 Ib mol/h and V = 53 Ib mol/h
Computing densities, we can make the following table (M,, = vapor molecular weight):
Pi. Pu M,
Tower top
80
349
48.5
0.126
55
0.0117
981
Just above feed
63
332
53
0.111
49
0.0088
996
Just below feed
288
57
53
0.111
49
0.230
171
Tower bottom
284
53
61
0.076
36
0.189
193
Referring to Figs. 12-2 and 12-3, we find that as V is increased proportionately throughout the tower,
the capacity limit will come for the conditions just above the feed. We are at low values of (L/C) x
(pc/Pi.)1 2. where entrainment may well be an important factor in plate columns (Fig. 12-6). This
again points to the tray just above the feed as the capacity limit. The very high vapor rate in the top
section is the dominant factor in this case.
(a) For the sieve-plate column, if we were to operate at 80 percent of flooding for (L./G)x
(PG'PL){ 2 = 0.0088, we would find from Fig. 12-6 that the entrainment (I/ would be 0.28 mol per
mole of gross downflow. This is above the suggested maximum \ji of 0.15. If we choose to limit >j/ to
0.09. we find from Fig. 12-6 that we must design our column for 58 percent of flooding. The exact if>
608 SEPARATION PROCESSES
chosen does not affect this figure greatly, as long as i/< is on the order of 0.10 or less. Returning to
Fig. 12-3, we find that for a 24-in tray spacing at (L/G)(pc/p,)' 2 = 0.0088
.1/2
-PG-1 =0.39
PL ~
I PL - Pc,\l:2
based on active area
Pa '
52 9
0. 1 1 1
1'2 3600
= 0.945 Ib/s-ft2 = 0.945 - - = 69.4 Ib mol/h-ft2
49
W. 1 I I 7 -t -
Since we have chosen to operate at 58 percent of flooding, we have, if we estimate that 70 percent of
the tower cross-sectional area will be active tray area,
332 Ib mol/h nd2
Tower cross-sectiona area = â âTâ - = 11.8 ft = â
(69.4lbmol,h-ft2)(0.58)(0.70) 4
Tower diameter d =
4(11.8)
3.14
I'2
= 3.88 ft
Rounding to the next highest half foot, we would estimate a 4-ft required diameter for a sieve-plate
column with a 24-in tray spacing.
(b) From Fig. 12-2 at (L/G)(pa/p,y 2 = 0.0088
For liquid water at 145°F. n = 0.48 cP. while for liquid acetone at 145°F, // = 0.23 cP (Perry
et al., 1963). Since n is raised to a low fractional power, the exact value of n is not critical: we
therefore estimate /i = 0.44 cP and get ft0 2 = 0.85. The density ratio .: is equal to approximately 1.18.
From Perry et al. (1963. p. 18-28), Van Winkle (1967). or Peters and Timmerhaus (1968). we
obtain ap/t3 for 1-in dumped ceramic Raschig rings as
Hence
Gflood =
(0.25)(4.17 x ._ â_...
~(]50)(0.85)(1.I8)
1858
= - = 37.9 Ib mol/h-ft2
If we operate at 80 percent of the flooding G.
1/2
= (3.53 x 106)1 2 = 1858 lb/h-ft2
rercem 01 me nooamg o.
Tower cross-sectional area = -" â = 10.9 ft2 = â
4(109) ' 2
Tower diameter d = - = 3.73 ft
3.14
Rounding to the next highest half foot, we would call for a 4-ft-diameter tower
FACTORS INFLUENCING EFFICIENCY
Although two-phase separation processes are often analyzed on the basis of hypoth-
etical equilibrium stages, it is important to realize that in all probability any real
single-stage contacting device will not give product streams which are in equilibrium
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 609
with each other. This lack of equilibrium is usually taken into account through stage
efficiencies. Several definitions of stage efficiency are possible; the most useful
definition for the analysis of multistage separation processes with cross flow on each
stage is probably the Murphree efficiency, discussed briefly in Chap. 3:
£
Ai =
--
â¢Mi -Mi. in
where EM1, is the Murphree efficiency for component i based upon mole fractions in
phase 1 and .xf, is the mole fraction of i in phase 1 which would be in equilibrium
with the actual outlet composition of phase 2. Equation (3-23) written for the gas
phase relates the actual gas composition exiting a stage and the gas composition
which would be in equilibrium with the existing liquid. Equation (3-23) can therefore
be incorporated into various computation approaches for multistage processes in a
relatively straightforward manner. Still simpler is the overall efficiency, which relates
the actual number of stages to the number of equilibrium stages required for an
equivalent separation. It is difficult to develop sound predictive methods for the
overall efficiency, however.
The factors causing a departure from equilibrium between product streams from
a stage were discussed in Chap. 3 and include (1) mass- and heat-transfer limitations,
(2) incomplete separation of the product phases, and (3) flow configuration and
mixing effects. In this chapter we explore these various factors in more detail and
consider the quantitative expressions which have been obtained experimentally for
vapor-liquid contacting on bubble-cap, sieve and valve trays.
Empirical Correlations
Two empirical correlations have seen considerable use. The correlation of Drickamer
and Bradford (1943) was based upon experimental data for 84 distillations separating
hydrocarbon mixtures in petroleum refineries. It relates the overall stage efficiency to
the mole-average viscosity of the feed at feed conditions. The overall efficiency
decreases with increasing feed viscosity, presumably reflecting a poorer dispersion for
higher-viscosity feeds.
The O'Connell (1946) correlation (Fig. 12-13) modified the Drickamer-Bradford
correlation by changing the correlating parameter to the product of the relative
volatility of the key components and the viscosity of the feed mixture, both evaluated
at the arithmetic mean of the top and bottom column temperatures. Data were
included for distillation of alcohol-water mixtures and chlorinated-hydrocarbon
mixtures as well as refinery hydrocarbon mixtures. The reduction in stage efficiency
at higher relative volatility may correspond to the increasing importance of liquid-
phase resistance to mass transfer in such cases, as rationalized by the AIChE
approach, discussed below. O'Connell (1946) generated a second correlation for
absorbers, using a solubility function instead of the relative volatility.
Mechanistic Models
The most extensive coordinated study of efficiencies of bubble-cap and sieve trays
available in the open literature is that carried out under the sponsorship of the
610 SEPARATION PROCESSES
100-
£ 50
_L
0.1
0.5 i
= relative volatility of keys x viscosity of feed (mPa-s).
both evaluated at average column conditions
10
Figure 12-13 Correlation for bubble-cap distillation columns. (From O'Connell, 1946, p. 751; useil h\
permission.)
Research Committee of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers in the 1950s
(AIChE, 1958). The approach developed for analysis and prediction of efficiencies
involves first accounting for the gas- and liquid-phase mass-transfer rates, so as to
generate a number of overall gas-phase transfer units (NTU)0(; provided in the
vertical direction at any location on a contacting tray. This number of transfer units
is then converted into a point efficiency E0(i by use of the simple Murphree model for
bubbles rising through a well-mixed liquid (Murphree, 1925). Changes in the liquid
composition across the tray are then accounted for through a tray-mixing model, to
convert the point efficiency into a Murphree vapor efficiency for the entire stage
E.w . Finally effects of entrainment are estimated and used to convert the Murphree
vapor efficiency into an apparent efficiency Ea, which is used if no other corrections
are made in the distillation calculation for the effects of entrainment.
In the 20 years since the AIChE study, considerable additional data have been
obtained for stage efficiencies of commercial-sized columns with various sorts of
trays. Most of these have been obtained by Fractionation Research. Inc., and are
therefore not available in the open literature: but with certain exceptions the basic
calculation approach and equation forms of the AIChE method have not been
changed; instead the parameters resulting from the AIChE analysis have been
updated. The exceptions have to do with allowance for liquid-mixing effects in the
conversion from E0(i to £MV and for the inherent differences between the froth and
spray regimes on sieve and valve trays. The AIChE method was predicated on a
froth-regime model.
Our approach will be to develop the AIChE model with some of the more
important updatings that appear in the open literature. This provides a basis for
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES: STAGE EFFICIENCY 611
mechanistic understanding of the factors influencing stage efficiencies for vapor-
liquid contacting on various sorts of plates and at the same time provides a frame-
work of analysis which can be updated on the basis of more current information.
Mass-Transfer Rates
Following the addition-of-resistances concept [Eq. (11-82)], the AIChE approach
first computes the number of overall gas-phase transfer units (NTU)fK; provided
vertically as the gas flows through the liquid at a point on the tray. This is done by
computing numbers of individual gas- and liquid-phase transfer units [(NTU)(; and
(NTU ), , Eqs. ( 1 1 - 108a) and ( 1 1 - 1 08/?)] and t hen adding these reciprocally to obtain
(NTU)OG by Eq. (11-109):
11A
! " â¢'""'
(NTU)C (NTU)L
The parameter A is HVpM /LP [Eq. (11-109)], or it is K, K/Lif K, is y,/.v, for compon-
ent / at equilibrium and is constant. Otherwise K, should be interpreted asdy./d.Xj at
equilibrium.
For most common distillation systems the gas-phase term in Eq. (12-6) is domin-
ant, and the process is thereby largely gas-phase-controlled. Liquid-phase resistance
to mass transfer becomes important for large values of /., for many absorption
systems, and for situations of a slow chemical reaction in the liquid phase, among
other cases.
In the AIChE study (AIChE, 1958) experimental measurements of gas-phase-
controlled systems provided values of (NTU)C which were correlated empirically as a
sum of linear terms involving different operating variables:
(NTU)C = (0.776 + 0.1 16W - 0.290F + 0.0217L)/(Sc)1/2 (12-7)
where W = outlet weir height, in
F = UG^/PQ = product of gas flow rate, ft3/s-ft2 active bubbling area, and
thesquare root of the gas density, lb/ft3 (square root of gas kinetic energy
per unit volume)
L = liquid flow, gal/min-ft of average liquid-flow-path width
Sc = gas-phase Schmidt number nc/Pc DC (HG = gas viscosity, pG = gas
density, DG = gas-phase diffusivity)
Gas-phase Schmidt numbers are on the order of unity.
In the same study the individual liquid-phase resistance was correlated as
(NTU)L = (1.065 x 104 x DL)1/2(0.26F + 0.15)f,. (12-8)
where DL = solute diffusivity in liquid, ft2/h
tL = residence time of liquid on active zone of tray, s
The term tL was defined as
(12-9)
612 SEPARATION PROCESSES
where Zf = holdup on tray. in3/(in2 tray bubbling area)
L= liquid rate, gal/mirr(ft average liquid-flow-path width)
Z, = length of liquid travel across active zone of tray, ft (distance between
inlet and outlet weirs)
37.4 = conversion factor, gal â¢s/min -in -ft2
Zc was determined experimentally as
Zc = 1.65 + Q.19W + 0.020L - 0.65F
(12-10)
where the terms have been defined previously. Alternatively, Zc can be estimated by a
method outlined by Fair (1973, pp. 18-9 and 18-15), which involves the aeration
factor and the dynamic seal.
With the individual phase resistances given by Eqs. (12-7) and (12-8), the overall
resistance expressed as (NTU)w; is then obtained from Eq. (12-6).
Gerster (1963) summarizes the results of mass-transfer measurements for sieve
trays, which appear to give (NTU)0(; approximately 15 to 25 percent higher than that
given by the preceding equations for bubble-cap trays. However, Fair (1973), on the
basis of accumulated experience, states that Eq. (12-7)" appears to be equally applic-
able to bubble-cap, sieve and valve plates," and Bolles (1976a) indicates that the
AIChE equations have been found to give satisfactory results when used directly for
valve trays.
Point Efficiency EOG
The original analysis leading to the concept of the Murphree vapor efficiency
(Murphree, 1925) was based upon a picture of individual, discrete bubbles rising
through a pool of liquid on a plate, as shown in Fig. 12-14. In the AIChE approach,
Gas out
i
o
o
o
o
O
o
o
o
Gas in
Figure 12-14 Gas bubbling through well-mixed liquid.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 613
this concept is retained to generate the point efficiency Eoc at any local position on a
tray from (NTU)0(; . It is assumed that the gas phase passes through in plug flow with
no backmixing and that the liquid is totally mixed vertically because of its short
height and its intense agitation as the continuous phase. The analysis is identical to
that leading to Eq. (11-152), and thereby gives
3>A.om -3>A.in _
>'A.OUI.E ~~ yA.in
It should be apparent from views like that in Fig. 12-8 that the contacting
situation is not nearly as simple as that depicted in Fig. 12-14. The Murphree model
does seem a reasonable first approximation for the froth regime, however, since in
that regime the liquid phase tends to be continuous. However, Raper, et al. (1977)
have shown that the gas flow in the froth regime for trays of industrial size can be
uneven, with a substantial fraction of the gas passing through the dispersion as large
slugs or jets. This effect is not taken into account by the simple Murphree model.
There has been much less work directed toward analysis and prediction of the
mass-transfer situation for the spray regime; also, reliable experimental data are
relatively limited. Hai et al. (1977; see also Fell and Pinczewski, 1977) have found
that the Murphree vapor efficiency for absorption of ammonia from air into
water in the spray regime increases with increasing F factor [compare the decrease
with increasing F in the froth regime, corresponding to the minus sign on F in
Eq. (12-7)], increases with increasing hole diameter, and decreases with increasing
free area (hole area per plate active area). Fane and Sawistowski (1969) have outlined
a mass-transfer model for the spray regime in which measured or correlated drop-
size distributions are used as the basis for analyzing mass transfer to and from
individual drops independently. Hai et al. (1977) and Raper et al. (1979) add to
this the concept that droplets form several different times from a mass of liquid as
it travels along a plate and find that the predictions of such a model agree at least
qualitatively with experiment. However, more extensive data and analysis and im-
provement of models are required before a reliable predictive method will be available
for the spray regime.
Flow Configuration and Mixing Effects
The basic flow pattern on a cross-flow plate is shown in Fig. 12-15. Although the
liquid concentration changes from inlet to outlet, as equilibration with the gas phase
occurs, how the liquid composition changes with respect to location is complex to
analyze because of different forward velocities of the liquid at different points, mixing
caused by the agitation in directions both parallel and transverse to the overall
direction of flow, and even local backward flow under some conditions.
Bell (1972) used a fiber-optic technique to identify the residence-time distribu-
tions and flow patterns of liquid across commercial-scale sieve trays. The results
showed a wide distribution of residence times, coupled with a pattern of more rapid
flow of liquid along the center of the tray than near the walls. Furthermore, there is a
tendency for retrograde, or backward, flow of liquid near the walls, which can result
in closed-circulation cells, shown schematically in Fig. 12-16. Related studies of flow
614 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Liquid outlet
Liquid flow
4 Gas
flow
Liquid inlet
Figure 12-15 Flow pattern on a plate.
nonuniformity of liquid across large distillation trays carried out by Alexandrov and
Vybornov (1971), Porter et al. (1972), and Weiler et al. (1973) all point to the same
features of the flow, with a tendency for backflow near the walls and circulation cells
to become more pronounced as the width of the flow path, i.e., column diameter,
increases.
A number of mathematical models have been proposed to analyze the effects of
Figure 12-16 Nonuniform flow of liquid across a plate, in the extreme where recirculation cells form-
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 615
the liquid-flow pattern across a plate. The results are best understood if the effects are
superimposed on each other, starting from the simplest cases.
Complete mixing of the liquid If the liquid is totally mixed in the direction of flow, as
well as in the vertical direction, the liquid composition at all points must be uniform
and equal to .xA-oul. If yAiin is uniform across the plate, and if (NTU)OC and hence
EOG are uniform across the plate, Eq. (12-11) indicates that )>A.OU1 will De constant
across the plate. If the vapor composition in equilibrium with the liquid exiting the
stage is denoted by _yA£ Xoui , the Murphree vapor efficiency for the entire stage should
be defined as
r^ .
MV' =
. out. av "A, in
For complete liquid mixing in the direction of flow yA.oul. E at all points will equal
yAE Xoui , and we have
EMV = EOG = I - e-- (12-13)
The Murphree vapor efficiency for the entire plate is equal to the point efficiency.
No liquid mixing: uniform residence time In the other extreme, plug flow of the liquid
along the plate, the liquid composition will vary continuously from .XA in at the liquid
inlet to .\A.OU1 at the liquid outlet. The relationship between EMV and E0(i [or
(NTU)OG] for this case was first obtained by Lewis (1936). Considering a differential
fraction of the total gas flowing upward through the liquid at some point along the
liquid-flow path (see Fig. 12-17), we can write
ou. - y\.\n)dG =
(12-14)
assuming that enough of component B travels in the other direction across the
interface to hold L constant.
V.1. ou,
âI-
,»'.4. in
dG
â¢*⢠Direction of integration
â Direction of liquid flow
Figure 12-17 Mass transfer in a differential slice of liquid on a plate.
616 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Substituting a linearized equilibrium expression j>A£ = HpM xA /P into
Eq. (12-14) gives
LP
(y\,oux - y\,in)dG = ââdyXE (12-15)
or introducing A = HGpM /LP leads to
-pr-(yA.ou>-y\,in)dG = dyAE (12-16)
where GM is the total molar gas-phase flow rate per unit area and is not a variable. If
yAin is uniform across the plate, Eq. (12-11) can be differentiated to yield
Eog dyKE = dyK_oaK (12-17)
Combining Eqs. (12-16) and (12-17) gives
^OdG= ^A.ou, (12.lg)
G» yA.oul â ^A.in
Integrating Eq. (12-18) from the liquid outlet back to any point along the flow path,
we have
kEOG | df= | yA_°u' (12-19)
'0 "yA.otii.iou, ^A.out .Va. in
where/is the fraction of the total gas flow which passes to the left, i.e., toward the
liquid outlet, of the point under consideration (df= dG/GM). Equation (12-19)
becomes
XE0G /= In yA.,u.-yA..- (12-20)
/A. out. Xoui ./A, in
Solving for yAoul as a function of/, we have
^a.ou. = >-A.in + ekE°Gf(yx,oux,Xoin - yA_,â) (12-21)
The average outlet-gas composition leaving the plate is
y\. oui. av = | >'a. ou. 4f = yA. in + (yA. oul, Xoul - yA. in) ââ (12-22)
⢠0 ALqc
Applying Eq. (12-11) to the liquid outlet point gives
>'A.ou..,olâ - >Vin = EOG(y*E.Xom - ^A.in) (12-23)
Substituting Eq. (12-23) into Eq. (12-22) and substituting the resultant equation into
Eq. (12-12) gives
Em = -x (12-24)
Figure 12-18 is a plot of EMy/EOG vs. kE0G following Eq. (12-24), showing that £M,
is always greater than EOG for this case of no mixing in the direction of liquid flow
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 617
Totally unmixed
Totally mixed
0.5
1.5
2.5
/-壉
Figure 12-18 Relation between EMV and £oc for liquid totally mixed and for uniform residence time
with liquid totally unmixed in the direction of flow.
and uniform liquid residence time. Comparing with Eq. (12-13), we see that the lack
of liquid mixing has increased EMV for a given (NTU)OC.
Equation (12-24) and the curve in Fig. 12-18 correspond to the vapor entering a
tray having uniform composition, as would occur for full mixing of vapor between
trays. Lewis (1936) also examined two other cases corresponding to the extreme of no
lateral mixing of the vapor between plates. The ratio EMV /EOG is improved some-
what over Eq. (12-24) if the liquid flows in the same direction across successive
plates, and it is lessened somewhat if the liquid-flow direction alternates from plate to
plate, which is the usual case. Smith and Delnicki (1975) describe a design which
achieves parallel liquid-flow directions on successive trays.
Full mixing of the liquid and uniform residence time with no mixing represent
the extremes between which the results for real flow and mixing conditions should lie.
No liquid mixing: distribution of residence times Bell and Solari (1974) have analyzed
theoretically the separate effects of a nonuniform liquid velocity field and retrograde
flow on the ratio EMy /EOG in the absence of liquid-mixing effects. Both factors serve
to reduce the ratio EMV /Eoc below the predictions of Eq. (12-24) and the curve in
Fig. 12-18. The effect of retrograde flow is particularly severe.
Several approaches have been pursued in efforts to narrow the distribution of
liquid residence times and thereby increase EMV /EOG with large trays. Weiler et al.
618 SEPARATION PROCESSES
(1973) report that slotting sieve trays to introduce vapor with a horizontal velocity
component in the direction of liquid flow serves to reduce the hydraulic gradient and
narrow the liquid-residence-time distribution, while at the same time discouraging
the development of retrograde flow. Smith and Delnicki (1975) present results of
several instances where sieve-plate vacuum columns with diameters in the range of 6
to 9 m were retrayed with trays which had a variable slot density and variable slot
directions, chosen to make the liquid residence time more uniform. The stage
efficiency was found to increase by 8 to 60 percent upon retraying. Yanagi and Scott
(1973) report the use of unusual designs for the inlet downcomer baffle and the outlet
weir on sieve trays 1.2 and 2.4 m in diameter, developed to narrow the residence-time
distribution for the liquid considerably. It is interesting that no increase in stage
efficiency was observed for two different distillation systems. This may be because the
tray diameter was much smaller than those cited by Smith and Delnicki, or it may
be the result of operation in the spray regime, where retrograde flow is less likely.
Partial liquid mixing Liquid mixing can occur in the directions parallel and perpen-
dicular to the overall direction of liquid flow. The former is called longitudinal, or
axial, mixing, and the latter is called transverse, or radial, mixing. The two forms of
mixing tend to affect the ratio EMy /EOG in different ways. Longitudinal mixing serves
to reduce the change in liquid composition along the length of the flow path and
make the liquid composition at all locations closer to the outlet-liquid composition.
This moves the system directionally from the "totally unmixed" curve in Fig. 12-18
toward the EMy = Eoc, line for total mixing and serves to reduce the ratio £M, /EOG â¢
On the other hand, transverse mixing serves to reduce the differences in liquid
composition created by nonuniform residence times and retrograde flow. In the case
of no longitudinal mixing, this should increase EMV/EOG above the predictions of
Bell and Solari (1974) for nonuniform residence time, toward the case of uniform
residence time. For the same reason, transverse mixing should also increase
EMy/E0(; in the presence of partial longitudinal mixing.
The AIChE model considers only the effect of longitudinal mixing, coupled with
a uniform liquid residence time. A certain effective diffusivity DE is assumed to be the
cause of mixing in the direction of liquid flow. Allowing for mixing as a diffusion
mechanism, one must modify the mass balance given by Fig. 12-17 and Eq. (12-14)
to include a term accounting for the gain or loss of component A by diffusion
_ (12-25)
where : is the distance in the direction of liquid flow and A the cross-sectional area of
liquid in the direction of flow. In the solution of this equation (Gerster, 1958) a
Peclet number Pe arises, given by
Pe = 7TT- = 7T7- <12"26)
DEApM DKtL
where Z, is the length of the liquid-flow path and t, is given by Eq. (12-9). If f, is
expressed in seconds and Z, in feet (or meters), D, must be given in square feet (or
square meters) per second.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 619
/.En
Figure 12-19 EMy/Eoa as a function of A£OG and Pe for
diffusion liquid-mixing model. (From AIChE, 1958,
p. 48: used by permission.)
The solution to Eq. (12-25) with the appropriate boundary conditions is
El ,,-<1 + Pe) ai 1
MV i â e e â L
where
fa + Pe){l + [(r, + Pe)/ij]} i,{l + fo/fo + Pe)]}
fc\L 4A£rtn\1/2_1
(12-27)
(12-28)
Again, it is assumed that (NTU)OG and hence £OG is constant across the plate. Figure
12-19 shows Eq. (12-27) as EMV /Eoc vs. A£oc with Pe as a parameter. Notice that the
extremes of Pe = 0 and Pe-> oo correspond to the two cases shown in Fig. 12-18.
For 3-in bubble caps on a 4.5-in triangular pitch and for sieve trays, the AIChE
tray-efficiency study (AIChE, 1958) found that DE could be correlated as
(D£)° 5 = 0.0124 + 0.0171uc + 0.00250L + 0.0150W
(12-29)
for D£ in square feet per second; UG is the superficial gas velocity, expressed as cubic
feet per second of vapor flow divided by the active bubbling area in square feet, and
W and L are the same as used previously. For sieve trays Gerster (1960) recommends
using values of DE from Eq. (12-29) multiplied by 1.25.
The effect of transverse mixing with no longitudinal mixing has been studied by
Solari and Bell (1978) by means of a theoretical model. The results give a basis for
analyzing the quantitative effect of transverse mixing in increasing EMV /EOG for
nonuniform residence times and/or retrograde flow. Their results show that circula-
tion patterns from retrograde flow should still have a strong reducing effect on
EMV /E00. The results also indicate that transverse mixing will often be a more
important effect than longitudinal mixing if the effective diffusion coefficients DE for
both processes are about the same.
Porter et al. (1972) have given a model considering a combination of nonuni-
620 SEPARATION PROCESSES
form flow and partial mixing in various directions. The tray area is divided into a
straight-through rectangular flow zone with uniform liquid velocity, adjoined by
stagnant circulating pools on either side of the main flow path. This is an idealization
of the flow pattern shown in Fig. 12-16. They use diffusional-mixing models within
the circulating pools and for longitudinal mixing in the main flow area as well as for
interchange between the two types of zones. Insufficient experimental data are avail-
able to allow one to develop correlations for the parameters of this model or for the
Solari and Bell model.
Porter et al. (1972) point out that another deleterious effect can stem from a lack
of full mixing of vapor between trays, since for common tray designs the stagnant-
pool zones on different trays will be located in a vertical line. This can lead to
channeling of the vapor through several trays without effective distillation. The
model of Porter et al. (1972) has been extended to cover consecutive plates in a
column (Lockett et al., 1973) and split-flow plates (Lim et al., 1974).
Discussion The analyses of Porter et al. and of Solari and Bell predict that the ratio
EMV /£OG should go through a maximum as tray diameter is increased for single-pass
trays or as the length of a flow path is increased for multipass trays. For very small
tray diameters the liquid will be fully mixed. For larger tray diameters incomplete
longitudinal mixing will increase EMl /EOG, and transverse mixing will keep nonuni-
form liquid velocity from exerting a strong negative effect. However, above some
critical large tray diameter, transverse mixing should no longer be able to counteract
the effects of nonuniform liquid velocity and backflow, and EMl /EOG should begin to
decrease again. Thus £M, /E0(i can go through a maximum as a function of tray
diameter, rather than continually increasing with increasing tray diameter as would
be concluded from the model of longitudinal mixing with uniform residence time
(Fig. 12-19). Even below this maximum, nonuniform liquid velocities can make
EMy /EOCl substantially less than predicted by Eq. (12-27) and Fig. 12-19. Porter et al.
(1972) predict that the maximum in EMV-/EOC should occur for single-pass tray
diameters in the range of 1.5 to 6 m, depending upon values of various parameters.
The fragmentary results of Smith and Delnicki (1975) and Yanagi and Scott (1973),
mentioned above, agree with this conclusion qualitatively.
Improvements in methods for analyzing and predicting flow configuration and
mixing effects on plates should continue. For trays of small to moderate diameter
(less than 2 m) it is probably still appropriate to use the longitudinal-mixing correc-
tion from the AIChE model, being wary of any predicted values of EM, !EOCl greater
than about 1.20. It will be appropriate to use mixing and velocity-distribution models
allowing for more different effects as experimental data are obtained in sufficient
amounts to give satisfactory ways of predicting and correlating the parameters in
these models.
Entrainment
As pointed out in Chap. 3, entrainment necessarily reduces the quality of separation
obtained in a stage. The effect of entrainment upon stage efficiencies in a countercur-
rent cascade of discrete stages has been analyzed by Colburn (1936). For A = 1 (that
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 621
is, for parallel operating and equilibrium lines) the apparent Murphree vapor
efficiency in the presence of entrainment Ea is related to the Murphree efficiency in
the absence of entrainment EMV by
£ =
'
(eEuv/L)
where e is the entrainment of liquid upward with the rising vapor reaching the next
stage above and L is the net liquid downflow, both in moles per unit time.
The entrainment for bubble and sieve trays at various vapor loadings can be
taken from Fig. 12-6. The quantity on the ordinate of that figure is ij/, the moles of
entrainment per mole of gross liquid downflow (net downflow plus entrainment
return). Substituting {]/ into Eq. (12-30) gives
Ehtv
(12-311
*)] l'"- '
Equations (12-30) and (12-31) account for the effect of entrainment satisfactorily for
cases where A is not too far removed from 1.0 and the variation of liquid composition
across the plate is not unusually large, i.e., for EMV JEOG near unity. The Colburn
derivation assumes that the entrainment from a stage has the composition of the exit
liquid from that stage.
Danly (1962) has examined the effect of entrainment when A is substantially
different from 1.0. Kageyama (1969) has explored effects of entrainment and weeping
upon efficiency when there is partial liquid mixing in the direction of liquid flow
across the plates. Entrainment can also be taken into account through modification
of the mass-balance equations instead of the efficiency (Loud and Waggoner, 1978).
Summary of AIChE Tray-Efficiency Prediction Method
Table 12-3 summarizes the AIChE prediction method for tray efficiencies.
Table 12-3 Summary of AIChE procedure for prediction of tray efficiency
1. Predict a value for (NTU)G. the number of gas-phase transfer units, from
0.776 + 0.1 \(>W - 0.290F + 0.0217L
(NTU)C = - (Sc)12 (12-7)
where Sc = dimensionless gas-phase Schmidt number
W â height of outlet weir, in
F = F factor, defined as product of gas rate, ft 3/s-(ft2 of tray bubbling area), and square root of
gas density, lb/ft3
L = liquid rate, gal min-(ft of average column width)
2. Compute liquid holdup on tray Zc expressed as inches of clear liquid:
Z, = 1.65 + 0.19W + 0.020L - 0.65F (12-10)
(continued)
622 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Table 12-3 (continued)
3. Compute average liquid contact time tL on the tray in seconds:
t-^f* (â¢Â»)
where Z, is distance in feet traveled on the tray by liquid and may be taken as the distance between
inlet and outlet weirs
4. Predict a value for (NTU), . the number of gas-phase transfer units, by
(NTU),. = (1.065 x 10*DJ"2(0.26F + 0.15)1, (12-8)
where D, = liquid-phase diffusivity. ft2/h
5. Combine (NTU)G and (NTU), to predict point efficiency Eoa:
-IrT (T= E~G) = (NTUU = (NTU); + (NTU)t
where A = ratio of slopes of equilibrium curve and operating line /CGM/LW or Hpu CH/PLM . LH is in
the same (molar) units as GM.
6. Compute a value for effective diffusivity in direction of liquid flow:
(DE)1;1 = 0.0124 + 0.017uc + 0.002501. + 0.0150W (12-29)
where uu = gas rate, ft3/s-(ft2 tray bubbling area)
Df = effective diffusivity. ft2/s
This equation is valid for round-cap bubble trays having cap diameters of 3 in or less ; for 6.5-in round
bubble caps increase value of D, by 33°,, and for sieve trays multiply Dr from Eq. (12-29) by 1.25
7. Compute Peclet number Pe
Pe= Z^~ (12-26)
0,tL
8. Obtain ratio Eut/E0(i from Fig. 12-19orEq. (12-27); use of figure requires knowledge of £OG, A, and
Pe; beware of any value of EHy/EOG greater than 1.2. and evaluate the behavior of trays with
diameters above 2 m in the light of recent studies (see text)
9. Obtain quantity of entrainment i/< from Fig. 12-6
10. Correct resulting tray efficiency for effect of entrainment by Colburn's equation
which relates £M1 , the efficiency obtainable in the absence of entrainment, to £â, the efficiency
obtained in presence of i/< mol of entrainment/mol of gross liquid downflow
Example 12-2 One of the original two processes for the production of heavy water D2O was the
distillation of natural water, which contains 0.0143 atom % deuterium. A flowsheet of the Morgan-
town, West Virginia, heavy-water distillation plant constructed in 1943 is given in Fig. 13-22. The
process is described further in Chap. 13, and the operating conditions are summarized in Table 13-2.
Because of the very large equipment costs for this plant, the stage efficiency for the distillation
was of paramount importance. Bubble-cap trays were used, and design efficiencies (Murphree vapor)
were set at 80 percent, according to the best estimates of that day, but in operation the efficiencies
turned out to vary between 50 and 75 percent. It is interesting to compare these results with the
predictions of the more recently developed AIChE method.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 623
The following tray characteristics applied to two of the towers in the distillation train:
Tower 2A Tower 3
Pressure, mmHg abs 126 126
Tower diameter, in 126 40
Plate spacing, in 12 12
Vapor flow, Ib/h 21,200 3050
Type of tray Bubble cap Bubble cap
Cap OD, in 33
Slot width, in A A
Slot height, in fl ii
Submergence, top of slot to
top of weir, in « i
Weir height, int 2 2
Active bubbling area per tray ("â
of tower cross-sectional areajt 65 65
Length of liquid flow path ("â
of tower diameler)t 75 75
t The weir height and detailed tray layouts are not given, but it
may be assumed that these values are close to correct.
Source: Data from Murphy et al. (1955).
Because of the low relative volatility (about 1.05), the towers operated very close to total reflux.
The tower pressures correspond to a temperature of 133°F. The properties of D2O may be con-
sidered essentially equal to those of H2O. Reid et al. (1977) give the diffusivity of D2O as 4.75 x 10~5
cm2/s at 45°C. Assume that the Schmidt number for the vapor mixture is about 0.50.
Using the AIChE method, estimate Murphree vapor efficiencies for the top few trays of towers
2A and 3. Compare the observed values with your prediction.
SOLUTION As the first step, compute F for tower 2A.
V = 21,200 Ib/h (given) Vapor density = â = 0.00689 lb/ft3
Bubbling area = *- (.0.5)^(0.65) - 56.4 ft' Vapor velocity - _^ = 15.. f,/s
F = (15.1)(0.00689)' 2 = 1.25
A similar calculation for tower 3 gives UG = 21.7 ft/s and F = 1.80.
As the next step we shall compute L for tower 2A. The average width of liquid flow path is
obtained from the analysis shown in Fig. 12-20.
Max width of flow path = diam = 126 in
cos x = 0.75 (Fig. 12-20) a = 41.5°
Min width of flow path = (sin tx)(diam) = 0.662 x diam
Av width of liquid-flow path * 0.85 x diam = 8.93 ft
Take L = V = 21,200 Ib/h, with liquid density equal to 8.2 Ib/gal.
A similar analysis for tower 3 gives L = 2.18 gal/min -ft.
624 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Figure 12-20 Tray geometry for Example 12-2.
Next we compute (NTU)G. For tower 2A,
(NTU)C(0.500)' 2 = 0.776 + (0.116)(2) - (0.290)(1.25) + (0.0217)(4.82)
= 0.776 + 0.232 - 0.362 + 0.105 = 0.751
(NTU)C = 1.06
For tower 3 the same calculation gives (NTU)G = 0.753.
As a next step we compute Zc for tower 2A.
Zc = (0.19)(2) - (0.65)(1.25) + (0.020)(4.82) + 1.65 = 0.38 - 0.812 + 0.096+1.65 = 1.31 in
The same calculation for tower 3 gives Z, = 0.90 in.
As a next step we compute tL for tower 2A:
37.4ZfZ, 37.4(1.31X0.75X10.5) fin
t, = = = 80 s
'⢠L 4.82
Performing the same calculation for tower 3, we find that f, = 38.4 s.
Next we can compute (NTU)L for tower 2A, but in order to do so it is necessary to convert the
reported diffusivity to the correct temperature and the correct units. The operating temperature of
133°F corresponds to 56°C, and aqueous diffusivities increase approximately 2.5 percent per Celsius
degree (Reid et al.. 1977). Hence
DL = (4.75 x KT5)[1 + (56 - 45)(0.025)] = 6.2 x 10"' cm2 s = 6.2 x 10~5 -,
= 2.4 x 10 * ft2/h
(Dt)12 = 1.55 x 10"2
0.26F + 0.15 = (0.26)(1.25) + 0.15 = 0.475
(NTU)t = (1.03 x 102)(1.55 x 10'2)(0.475)(80) = 61
The same calculation for tower 3 gives (NTU), = 38.
For combining the individual phase transfer units we need a value of/.. Because of the very high
reflux ratio necessitated by the relative volatility being close to 1.0, '/. can be set as equal to 1.00.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 625
within about 2 percent. Hence from Eq. (12-6) we find that (NTU)oG is essentially equal to (NTU)G
for both towers. In other words, the system is highly gas-phase-controlled.
fw-rin I1'04 tower 2A
(NTU)oo= 10.74 tower 3
Next we can compute Eoa from Eq. (12-13):
_]!-«- '-04 = 0.646 tower 2A
00 ~ ll - e-°-74 = 0.522 tower 3
It is next necessary to allow for partial liquid mixing and thereby relate EMy to £oc. For tower 2A,
(DE)1/2 = 0.0124 + (0.017)(15.1) + (0.00250 )(4.82) + (0.0150)(2)
= 0.0124 + 0.256 + 0.012 + 0.030 = 0.310
Ds = 0.0962 ft2/s
Similarly, DE = 0.173 ft2/s for tower 3. For tower 2A,
(0.75x10.5)' ^
0.0962(80)
For tower 3 we get Pe = 0.94, the much lower value coming from the smaller tower diameter.
Following Fig. 12-19, we get:
Tower A£OG Pe
2A 0.646 8.05 1.29 0.646 0.833
3 0.522 0.94 1.05 0.522 0.548
Next we need to assess the effect of entrainment in lowering £Mt during operation. Computing
the abscissa of Fig. 12-6 for both towers, we get
\PL
From Fig. 12-3 for a 12-in tray spacing
t/M"> = 1«'2 = 0.0106
G\pJ \ 61 /
Kr = tfn-dl- I = 0.23 ft/s and V^ = ^^ = 22 ft/s
For tower 2A,
From Eq. (12-49)
Percent of flooding = 100 â^- = 69°0 ^ = 0.25
0.833 0.833 _
' ~ 1 + [(0.25)(0.833)/0.75] ~ 1.278 ~ '
For tower 3, the indicated percent of flooding is very nearly 100 percent. We shall presume that the
detailed tray layout and/or the operating conditions were such as to reduce this to, perhaps, 90
percent of flooding, in which case from Fig. 12-6 we find that \fi = 0.50 and
0.548 _
' ~ 1 + [(0.50)(0.548)/0.50] ~ '
626 SEPARATION PROCESSES
If the operation of tower 3 were at 80 percent of flooding, we would get >ji = 0.33 and E, = 0.43. We
can summarize as:
Experimental
Tower E0(- EMy £. range
2A °65 °'83 °65 0.500.70
3 0.52 0.55 0.35-0.43
Therefore our conclusion is that the low observed plate efficiencies would have been predicted with
this design if the AlChE results and prediction method had been available when this plant was built.
n
Although the AIChE method for the prediction of gas-liquid plate efficiencies is
elaborate and accounts for a number of effects which are to be expected theoretically,
it does not always give good agreement with observed efficiencies. To some extent
this is a result of the simplicity of the model for liquid mixing and the fact that the
experimental data incorporated in the correlations were limited to certain ranges of
operation; however, there are also a number of other effects which are known to have
an influence upon plate efficiencies and which are not accounted for in the AIChE
method. Several of these are considered in the following sections.
One particular observation that is not rationalized by the AIChE model is that
distillation, absorption, and stripping columns designed to reach unusually high
product purities (very low concentration of a solute or a key component) have often
been found to yield an unexpectedly low stage efficiency. In some cases (but not all)
this can reflect a large influence of A/(NTU)0/, in Eq. (12-6). Another possible explan-
ation is given under Surface-Tension Gradients, below.
Chemical Reaction
Murphree efficiencies are based on a comparison of the actual exit composition of
one phase leaving a stage to the composition of that phase which would be in
equilibrium with the exiting composition of the other phase. If a chemical reaction is
involved in the equilibration procedure within the stage, as in the absorption of
carbon dioxide by basic solutions, it is necessary to account for the rate of this
reaction in predicting and analyzing stage efficiencies. Phase-equilibrium data are
based upon relatively long-time measurements wherein full chemical equilibrium is
attained. The shorter times of contact in a continuous separation device can often
result in the reaction proceeding to a lesser extent than represented by the equili-
brium data. Thus the effect of a chemical reaction of finite rate is necessarily to reduce
the stage efficiency or else to leave it unchanged. If the solute reacts completely and
immediately achieves equilibrium upon entering the phase wherein it reacts, the
process will essentially be the same as a purely physical mass-transfer process, in
which the full concentration-difference driving force for diffusion is operative
throughout the reacting phase. The efficiency then will be similar to the efficiencies
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 627
for situations which are not complicated by chemical reactions. If, on the other hand,
the solute must cross the interface under the impetus of only its physical solubility or
a solubility corresponding to only partial reaction and then reacts in the bulk phase,
the driving force in the denominator of the transfer-unit expressions will be reduced
compared with the desired change in bulk composition, and a lesser amount of
equilibration will occur with a given interfacial area and given mass-transfer
coefficient. The driving force for mass transfer is small, but the amount of composi-
tion change to be accomplished is large.
This phenomenon is the reason for the low stage efficiencies noted in Example
10-2 for the carbon dioxide ethanolamine absorption system. In order for equili-
brium to be reached in the liquid phase, it is necessary to overcome the physical
resistance to diffusion and the additional resistance afforded by the finite rate of
chemical reaction. The rate of reaction between H2S and ethanolamines is much
more rapid than the reaction rate between CO2 and ethanolamines; hence the ob-
served stage efficiencies for H2S absorption into ethanolamines are substantially
greater than those for CO2 absorption into ethanolamines.
Ways of allowing for the effect of simultaneous chemical reaction upon stage
efficiencies and upon mass-transfer processes in general are discussed by Danckwerts
and Sharma (1966), Astarita (1966), and Danckwerts (1970).
Surface-Tension Gradients: Interfacial Area
It has been found that the flow pattern on a plate during distillation can have very
different froth and spray characteristics depending upon the relative surface tensions
of the species being separated. This phenomenon was first explored in detail and
analyzed by Zuiderweg and Harmens (1958), who also examined the same phenom-
enon for gas-liquid contacting in packed, wetted-wall, and spray columns.
When the more volatile component has the lower surface tension in the distil-
lation of a binary mixture in the froth regime, the froth is more substantial and
more stable than when the more volatile component has the higher surface tension.
The explanation for this phenomenon lies in a consideration of the role of surface-
tension gradients in governing the stability of froths and foams. The liquid in a froth
will become percentwise more depleted in the more volatile component during dis-
tillation in local regions where the liquid film is thin. In a distillation where the more
volatile component has the lesser surface tension, called a positive system, this greater
depletion will mean that the liquid surface tension is higher in the thin-film regions
than at surrounding points. As shown in Fig. 12-2 la, the resultant surface-tension
gradient along the surface sets up a surface-energy driving force, causing liquid flow
from the low-surface-tension region to the high-surface-tension region. This flow is
favored energetically because of the reduction it will cause in the total surface energy
of the system. As a result of this flow, thin regions which would otherwise break
are made thicker and reinforced. Thus froth stability is promoted.
In a system where the more volatile component has the higher surface tension
(a negative system), thin regions of the froth will have a lower surface tension and,
as shown in Fig. 12-216, there will be a flow away from the thin regions, reducing
the total surface energy. Thus thin regions will tend to break even more readily
628 SEPARATION PROCESSES
VAPOR VAPOR
Low surface tension High surface tension High surface tension Low surface tension
High \MI
* i L*V* .\ if t'/~ y
(a] (>>l
Figure 12-21 Effect of surface-tension gradients on froth stability: (a) self-heating positive system: (b) self-
destructive negative system.
than they would in the absence of any surface-tension gradient, and the froth is
unstable.
Zuiderweg and Harmens (1958) cite data for the effect of this phenomenon on
contacting efficiency for the distillation of a number of different mixtures in different
devices. For example, in a 1-in-diameter Oldershaw sieve-plate column with vapor
velocities in the range of 0.2 to 2 ft/s the system n-heptane-toluene (a positive system)
gave plate efficiencies of 80 to 90 percent, whereas the system benzene-n-heptane (a
negative system) gave efficiencies of 50 to 55 percent. This increase in efficiency is
obtained at the expense of some loss in capacity, however. For the heptane-toluene
system, froth heights of 4 to 6 cm were found, as opposed to 1 to 2 cm for the benzene-
heptane system. Thus a positive system would be expected to show greater tendencies
toward entrainment and flooding.
Hart and Haselden (1969) found similar influences of surface-tension gradients
upon froth heights and stage efficiencies and offer additional interpretations. They
used a quite small column, as did Zuiderweg and Harmens. The effect has also been
observed in a number of other studies of distillation in the froth regime.
The effects of positive and negative systems are reversed in the spray regime.
Bainbridge and Sawistowski (1964) found higher stage efficiencies for negative systems
than for positive systems for a sieve-tray column operating in the spray regime (see
also Fane and Sawistowski, 1968). They attributed this to the fact that spray droplets
are formed by a liquid-necking mechanism, shown schematically in Fig. 12-22. As a
mass of liquid is thrust outward from the liquid bulk, the narrow neck connecting
this incipient droplet will become depleted in the more volatile component, because
of the high surface-to-volume ratio of the neck. In a positive system this causes the
neck liquid to have a higher surface tension, and there will consequently be a healing
flow from the surrounding liquid, reducing this surface tension. The drop therefore
tends not to break away. On the other hand, for a negative system the liquid in the
neck will have a lower surface tension than the bulk, and a flow will be set up
whereby this low-surface-tension liquid is taken into the bulk liquid, lessening its
surface tension. This promotes breakage of the neck and formation of the drop.
Photographs supporting this mechanism are shown by Boyes and Ponter (1970).
Higher efficiencies in the spray regime for negative systems, as opposed to positive
or neutral systems, have also been found by several other investigators.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 629
Vapor
Vapor
Low.vuu
// /
Low A'V
/ tSS \ / /
Lower surface
.Higher surface ^ 'V tension
tension
Liquid
(a)
Figure 12-22 Effect of surface-tension gradients on drop formation: (a) positive and (b) negative system.
( Adapted from Bainbridge and Sawistowski. 1964, p. 993: used by permission.)
These differences between the froth and spray regimes lead to a suggested design
strategy (Fell and Pinczewski, 1977) whereby for surface-tension-positive systems
one would design sieve trays to operate at a relatively low vapor velocity, consistent
with acceptable turndown ratios, so as to operate in the froth regime. The tray
spacing could be kept low (0.30 to 0.45 m) because of the consequent low tendency
toward entrainment. Small holes and low hole areas would be used, since they favor
high efficiency in the froth regime. For surface-tension-negative systems, one would
design sieve trays to operate at a relatively high vapor velocity, with large hole
diameter and greater hole area, since they all favor the transition to the spray regime
and increase efficiency in that regime. Tray spacing would be greater (0.45 to 0.60 m)
to accommodate the larger tendency toward entrainment. In some cases one might
choose the spray regime for a positive system in order to reduce the column
diameter. For severely foaming systems one might choose the froth regime for the
lower vapor velocity and/or greater ease of providing large downcomer volumes for
phase disengagement.
The froth and spray stabilizing and collapsing effects of positive and negative
systems should be enhanced by factors which increase the local gradients in surface
tension, i.e., larger differences in surface tension between the pure components, high
relative volatility, and any other factors which increase the composition change from
stage to stage. Multicomponent systems are as susceptible as binary systems to these
effects and can more readily lead to different behavior in different sections of a
column.
As mentioned previously, unexpectedly low stage efficiencies are often found in
distillation, stripping, and absorption systems where very high purities are sought
and the component being separated is present at very low concentrations. In such a
case surface-tension gradients become insignificantly small: positive systems will no
longer give the froth-stabilizing effects in the froth regime, and negative systems will
no longer give the neck-rupture effect in the spray regime. This may account for at
least some of the reports of stage efficiencies which become much lower at extremes
of the composition range.
Zuiderweg and Harmens (1958) show that surface-tension-gradient effects are
630 SEPARATION PROCESSES
important in packed towers and wetted-wall columns, as well. The liquid spreads
more readily over the solid surface and provides more interfacial area (and hence a
greater efficiency) for a positive system than for a negative one. The reasoning is
essentially the same as that shown in Fig. 12-21. In positive systems thin regions of
liquid become more depleted in the more volatile component and are healed by
surface tension-driven flow in from thicker regions. In negative systems the same
phenomena cause liquid to flow out of thin regions. Norman (1961) gives a vivid
evidence of this phenomenon from measurements of the minimum flow necessary to
wet the wall of a wetted-wall column totally during distillation of n-propanol-water
mixtures. As shown in Fig. 12-23, the n-propanol-water system forms an azeotrope.
n-propanol being more volatile at low mole fractions of n-propanol, and water being
more volatile at high mole fractions of n-propanol. Since water has a greater surface
tension than Ji-propanol, the system is positive for mole fractions of n-propanol
below the azeotrope and is negative for mole fractions of n-propanol above the
azeotrope. The walls are much more readily wet during distillation at positive-system
compositions than in the range of negative-system compositions.
The same phenomenon is observed in glass wetted-wall columns used for HC1
absorption into water from air. In the absence of HC1 gas one can set the water rate
to achieve full wetting of the walls, but when HC1 is introduced to the system, the
liquid film breaks and falls into rivulets. In this case thin regions of liquid film are
richer in HC1 and are hotter because of the large heat of absorption. The presence of
dissolved HC1 reduces the surface tension of water, as does increasing temperature;
thus the absorption of HC1 into water is a negative system.
Surface-tension-gradient effects in separation processes have been reviewed in
more detail by Berg (1972).
Density and Surface-Tension Gradients: Mass-Transfer Coefficients
A number of investigators have observed the occurrence of interfacial mixing cells in
a two-phase fluid system undergoing an interphase mass-transfer process. This phen-
5.E
."2 5
v.
c
C.H-OH in liquid, mole percent
C,H-OH in liquid, mole percent
Figure 12-23 Minimum welting rates for n-propanol-water distillation in a wetted-wall column. (Adapted
from Norman anil Binns, I960. p. 296: used by permission.)
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 631
Gas
(air)
Water
Liquid
(water + ethylene glycol)
Circulation develops
due to density
"-Glycol rich
(high density)
â Glycol lean
(low density)
(a)
Gas
(air + water)
Water
Liquid
(elhylene glycol)
No circulation develops
due to density
l/'l
â Glycol lean
(low density)
-xGlycol rich
/ (high density)
Figure 12-24 Density-driven interfacial mixing: (a) desorption, unstable system; (h) absorption, stable
system.
omenon can result from gradients in either density or surface tension. The density-
driven phenomenon is illustrated in Fig. 12-24a, where it is presumed that a lighter
substance, e.g., water, is being desorbed from a heavier, less volatile solvent, e.g.,
ethylene glycol, into a gas phase which lies above the liquid phase. As the light
substance evaporates, a region of greater density develops near the interface and as a
result a region of high-density liquid occurs above a region of low-density liquid.
This is an unstable situation which will tend to be relieved through cellular motion in
which heavy interface liquid flows downward and lighter bulk liquid flows upward.
This circulation increases the liquid-phase mass-transfer coefficient and is analogous
to the action of natural convection in heat transfer.
Figure l2-24b depicts a stable situation, wherein water vapor is absorbed from
humid air into ethylene glycol. Here a region of lower density develops above a
region of higher density; this is a stable configuration and no density-driven circula-
tion develops.
Surface-tension-driven interfacial mixing is illustrated in Fig. \2-25a and b. The
surface tension of pure water (72 dyn/cm at 25°C) is greater than that of pure
ethylene glycol (48 dyn/cm at 25°C). When there is absorption of water vapor from
humid air into glycol, a water-rich region develops near the interface, compared with
the bulk liquid. Consequently this means that the liquid near the interface has a
higher inherent surface tension than the bulk liquid. As a result, circulation cells
632 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Gas Water
(air + water)
lean
(high surface tension)
. L'cro1 lean .
due to surface tension ^-(h.gh surface tension)
(b)
Figure 12-25 Surface-tension-driven interfacial mixing: (a) absorption, unstable system; (b) desorption,
stable system.
which remove liquid from the region near the surface and replace it with bulk liquid
are energetically favored, since they will lower the surface energy of the system.
Again, as a result of these circulation patterns, the liquid-phase mass-transfer
coefficient will be increased. In the reverse situation where the liquid near the inter-
face has a lower inherent surface tension than the bulk liquid the situation is stable,
and no surface-tension-driven circulation develops.
It should be stressed that interfacial mixing can occur for mass transfer in differ-
ent directions in different systems, depending upon the relative densities and surface
tensions of the species present. Density-driven interfacial circulation can occur in a
gas phase as well as a liquid phase, but surface-tension-driven circulation is unlikely
in a gas phase, except for what may be caused by drag from the liquid phase, because
surface tensions are quite insensitive to the nature or composition of the gas phase.
The density-driven phenomenon is dependent upon density gradients in the direction
of gravity, while the surface-tension-driven phenomenon is dependent upon surface-
tension gradients in the direction normal to the interface.
The quantitative effects of density-driven circulation in increasing rates of mass
transfer have been summarized by Lightfoot et al. (1965). Berg (1972) reviews exper-
imental measurements of enhancement of mass transfer by interfacial mixing.
The accelerating effects of surface-tension-driven cellular convection upon mass-
transfer rates have all been measured for laminar or stagnant systems, however, and
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 633
it is still an open question whether such cellular motion will affect mass-transfer rates
significantly under the highly turbulent conditions of most commercial separation
devices.
Surface-Active Agents
Surfactants are substances that markedly lower the surface tension of a liquid when
added in small quantities. Aqueous surfactants are typically amphiphilic molecules,
having one portion which is polar and water-loving and another portion which is
nonpolar, e.g., hydrocarbon, and is less compatible with water. An example of an
aqueous surfactant is hexadecanol, CH3(CH2)i4CH2OH, in which the OH group is
polar but the rest of the molecule is hydrocarbon.
When surfactants are added to fluid-phase separation devices, they can have a
marked influence upon mass-transfer rates. Because of the decrease in surface
tension, the addition of surfactants generally makes the liquid tend to spread on a
wetted wall or a packing more readily. Also, surfactants impart an elasticity to
a liquid film wherein any disruptions to the film will cause a locally lower surfactant
concentration and hence a higher surface tension. This in turn will give a tendency
for flow into the disrupted region, which will tend to keep the film from breaking.
Thus Francis and Berg (1967) found that KGa for the distillation of formic acid
and water in a packed column was increased by as much as a factor of 1.5 by the
addition of a surfactant, 1-decanol. This is a gas-phase-controlled system for mass
transfer, and it appears that the increased efficiency comes from an increased interfa-
cial area caused by better spreading of the liquid on the packing. Bond and Donald
(1957) found a similar beneficial effect from the addition of a surfactant to water
absorbing ammonia from a gas phase in a wetted-wall column. In the presence of the
surfactants the walls became fully wet much more readily. Ponter et al. (1976) have
interpreted data for packed-column distillation of butylamine and water in terms of
the system wetting properties.
Because of their film-stabilizing properties, many surfactants serve to generate
and promote foams. Foaming in plate columns for gas-liquid contacting can increase
stage efficiencies (Bozhov and Elenkov, 1967), but more often than not foaming
causes a serious problem of entrainment, priming, and/or early flooding. Therefore it
is usually avoided. Ross (1967) analyzes causes of foaming in distillation columns
and means of controlling it, e.g., antifoam agents.
Surfactants can influence the amount of surface area in a froth or spray, even if a
foam, as such, is not formed. Brumbaugh and Berg (1973) found that 1-decanol
increases froth height and stage efficiency for distillation of the azeotropic system
formic acid-water in the composition range where it is a negative system. In the
positive range the froth height increased, but no change in efficiency was detectable.
Injecting a surfactant into a gas-liquid or liquid-liquid contacting system often
results in a reduction of liquid-phase mass-transfer coefficients, in addition to
whatever effect it may have on interfacial area. Usually this lowering of the mass-
transfer coefficient is the result of hydrodynamic factors, wherein the surfactant
suppresses large-scale fluid motions in the vicinity of the interface (Davies, 1963;
Davies et al., 1964) or causes surface stagnation (Merson and Quinn, 1965) because
634 SEPARATION PROCESSES
the replacement of the surface liquid layer with bulk liquid would result in an
elevation of the surface energy of the system. Here again, however, it has not been
confirmed that these effects would be important in the intensely agitated situation on
a distillation plate. The possibility of an interfacial resistance to mass transfer caused
by a reduced solute solubility or diffusivity in a surfactant layer at the interface has
been the subject of controversy for a number of years. Careful measurements (Sada
and Himmelblau, 1967; Plevan and Quinn. 1966) indicate that such a resistance
probably will be significant only for surfactant molecules which form a rigid semi-
solid film at the interface. Thus hexadecanol can provide a significant interfacial
resistance to mass transfer in aqueous systems, but naturally occurring surfactants
in water usually do not.
Berg (1972) has reviewed the effects of added surfactants.
Heat Transfer
The AIChE method ignores effects of heat transfer, even though the vapor and liquid
entering a plate have different temperatures and must also equilibrate thermally.
Kirschbaum (1940) suggested that plate efficiencies in distillation should be analyzed
as a heat-transfer process or in terms of driving forces for both heat and mass transfer
(1950). Danckwerts et al. (1960) and Liang and Smith (1962) have discussed how
simultaneous heat transfer can affect the rate of equilibration. Two effects are
possible: one involves the tendencies of the bulk phases to become supersaturated
during the equilibration, and the other involves the need for net evaporation or net
condensation at the interface.
Figure 12-26 shows a temperature-composition diagram for a binary system. The
. rlsaturated vapor)
-Inlei vapor
Inlet liquid
v(saturated liquid)
Figure 12-26 Effect of simultaneous
heat and mass transfer on bulk phase
compositions in distillation.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 635
saturated-vapor (dew-point) and saturated-liquid (bubble-point) curves are shown,
along with postulated temperatures and compositions of the vapor and liquid enter-
ing a plate. If equilibrium between these streams were reached, the two exit phases
would have the same temperature and the vapor and liquid compositions would be
those corresponding to the ends of the dashed line. When one considers the compara-
tive rates of heat and mass transfer which occur between the phases, it turns out that
the ratio of heat transfer to mass transfer should in most cases be large enough for
the two phases to become supersaturated. This tendency is shown by the arrows
leading into the two-phase region. As the phases become supersaturated, fog or mist
can form in the vapor phase and either bubbles can form in the liquid or bulk liquid
can flash-vaporize when it comes to the phase interface through large-scale mixing
actions. Material which has been formed in equilibrium with the bulk vapor can join
the bulk liquid, and material which has formed in equilibrium with the bulk liquid
can join the bulk vapor. As a result plate efficiencies should be increased.
Fog formation in distillation towers has been observed by Haselden and Suther-
land (1960) and others. Boiling or flashing in a plate distillation column is difficult to
detect visually, but bubble formation has been noted on the surface of the packing in
packed distillation columns (Norman, 1960; etc.). Further confirmation that evapor-
ation and condensation occur and relieve phase supersaturation during distillation
comes from the measurements made by Liang and Smith (1962) and Haselden and
Sutherland (1960), who found that the liquid, and probably also the vapor, leaving a
plate or flowing in a packed column is at the temperature corresponding to ther-
modynamic saturation for the particular composition of the vapor or liquid stream.
Although the additional equilibration in distillation caused by the evaporation
and condensation resulting from simultaneous heat transfer can no doubt be
significant, it should not be an overwhelming effect because of the usually large
values of the latent heat of vaporization.
Heat transfer can also occur across the metallic surfaces of the downcomers and
plates in a distillation column. The effect of this type of heat transfer upon apparent
plate efficiencies has been measured and analyzed by Warden (1932) and Ellis and
Shelton (1960), who found it to be most significant at low vapor flow rates. For the
large-diameter columns usually employed in practice the effect should be relatively
small, however.
The second way simultaneous heat transfer can affect the equilibration rate on a
distillation plate is through preferential evaporation or condensation at the interface.
Figure 12-27 shows the temperature and composition profiles in the vapor and liquid
phases on either side of the interface. In the absence of heat transfer the interfacial
composition tends to achieve a value such that the mass flux NA will be the same in
each phase, avoiding accumulation at the interface. Similarly, in the absence of mass
transfer the interfacial temperature will achieve such a value as to make the heat-
transfer rates to and from the interface equal. The interface temperature will thus be
the average of the bulk-phase temperatures weighted by the heat-transfer coefficient
of either phase. The liquid-phase heat-transfer coefficient is usually substantially
greater than the gas-phase heat-transfer coefficient because of the higher thermal
conductivity, and as a result the interface temperature will be close to the liquid-
phase temperature.
636 SEPARATION PROCESSES
, T hGTr..+ h,TL
For no mass transfer 7, = âr-
"c + "/.
Figure 12-27 Factors controlling net evaporation
or condensation at the interface.
When heat and mass transfer occur simultaneously, the interfacial composition
and temperature must be in equilibrium with each other following a phase diagram
like Fig. 12-26. In order to maintain this condition there must be a net evaporation
or condensation of material at the interface so as to make the heat flux different in the
two phases. Because the liquid-phase heat-transfer coefficient is usually much greater
than that in the gas. the necessary AT's usually will tend to require that the heat flux
away from the interface into the liquid be greater than that to the interface from the
gas. Therefore there should usually be a net condensation of material at the interface
to release heat, which will then be removed through the liquid. This net condensation
will affect the gas- and liquid-phase mass- and heat-transfer coefficients somewhat
and will tend to produce a supersaturation of the liquid, which would then be
relieved by subsequent flashing of material brought to the interface from the bulk
through large-scale mixing action.
A number of experimental results show plate efficiencies and packed-column
efficiencies increasing in a range of composition where temperature driving forces are
large and have been interpreted in terms of the added efficiency due to simultaneous
heat transfer (Liang and Smith, 1962; Sawistowski and Smith, 1959). The systems for
which the largest effects of this sort have been found (methanol-water, cyclohexane-
toluene, acetone-benzene, heptane-toluene, acetone-chlorobenzene) are also positive
systems which have a surface-tension-vs.-composition relationship which favors
spreading of liquid films and froth stability. When thermal driving forces are large,
the surface-tension gradients are also large. Consequently it is difficult to separate the
surface-tension effect from the heat-transfer effect. One can see the interfacial area
effects, and they have been shown to exist and to be of considerable importance. The
same cannot be said for the heat-transfer effects.
Multicomponent Systems
The stage equilibration process in a multicomponent system must be characterized
by R - 1 Murphree efficiencies if there are R components. There is no need for these
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 637
individual efficiencies to equal each other. The importance of the factor A in the
various equations underlying the AIChE method for binaries strongly suggests that
components with different K, values (and hence different A^) will have different values
of EOGJ and/or £M(J. Through calculations using tray mixing models, Biddulph
(1975ft, 1977) has demonstrated that even equal values of Eocj in a ternary system
should lead to variable and different values of EMyj for different components at
different column locations. Theories of multicomponent diffusion also indicate that
EOCJ should be different for different components in a mixture of dissimilar
substances.
Measurements of EOGj and/or EMVj for multicomponent distillations have
confirmed that the efficiencies for different components tend to be different, except
for E0(;j of quite similar components under conditions of gas-phase control and
EMV/EOG near unity (Nord, 1946; Qureshi and Smith, 1958; Free and Hutchison,
1960; Haselden and Thorogood, 1964; Diener and Gerster, 1968; Miskin et al., 1972;
Young and Weber, 1972; etc.). However, insufficient data are available to allow the
development of a reliable predictive method.
Two factors complicate allowance for different efficiencies for different compon-
ents in multicomponent-distillation calculations, the lack of data and the difficulty of
making the computation. The computational difficulty arises from the fact that the
Murphree efficiency of one component is a dependent variable. For most multicom-
ponent separation processes it is the compositions of the key components which are
of the most interest, the nonkey components rather rapidly approaching their limit-
ing concentrations. Thus one Murphree efficiency corresponding to the key-
component separation can be used satisfactorily for all components in most cases
where the actual distribution of nonkeys is not of interest. This efficiency can often be
predicted by binary methods, since the key components frequently constitute a large
fraction of the interstage flows and contribute most of the interfacial mass flux.
ALTERNATIVE DEFINITIONS OF STAGE EFFICIENCY
Criteria
A number of different expressions for plate and stage efficiency have been proposed
over the years. To some extent they are interchangeable and can be related through
equations involving A (= KV/L) and other parameters. There are, however, two
criteria which should be met by a definition of plate or stage efficiency in order for it
to be most useful: (1) The defined efficiency should be usable in a computation
sequence for the separation device under consideration with a minimum of complex-
ity and iteration in the calculation; (2) the magnitude of the efficiency should reflect
primarily the size of heat- and mass-transfer coefficients and should be relatively
independent of the value of A, the solute concentration level, and the size of the
driving force for equilibration. Under these conditions the efficiency should not vary
greatly from stage to stage, and it may be possible to use a single value of the
efficiency throughout a separation cascade.
638 SEPARATION PROCESSES
The Murphree vapor efficiency meets these criteria well for situations where
1. The liquid phase can be considered well mixed.
2. The vapor flows through the liquid in plug flow.
3. The mass-transfer process is gas-phase-controlled.
4. The stages are part of a countercurrent cascade for which calculations are being made along
the cascade in the direction of vapor flow from stage to stage.
These four conditions apply reasonably well to common distillation processes. With
the-liquid well mixed in the direction of vapor flow and with the vapor in plug flow,
EOG is given by Eq. (12-13) and is a function of (NTU)OG alone; (NTU)oG is
determined by (NTU)G, which reflects mass-transfer parameters and is independent
of A if the system is gas-phase-controlled, as shown by Eq. (12-6). If the liquid is well
mixed in the direction of liquid flow, EMy will equal Eoc and will depend solely upon
(NTU)00 if EOG does. If the liquid is not totally mixed in the direction of flow, some
dependence of EMV upon A is introduced through the functionality shown in
Fig. 12-19. If the stages in a countercurrent cascade are calculated sequentially in the
direction of vapor flow, it is possible to obtain the composition of the vapor leaving a
stage directly from the composition of the liquid leaving that stage without trial and
error if the Murphree vapor efficiencies are known.
Murphree Liquid Efficiency
In order for the Murphree liquid efficiency, defined as
£_ *A.om.av ~ *A. in ,. .» ,.,>
ML - -7â (12-52)
x\E,yma ~ AA.in
to be as useful, the system would have to be liquid-phase-controlled for mass transfer
and should have plug flow of liquid through a well-mixed vapor. These conditions
are not well met in plate distillation columns but may be reasonable for gas-liquid
processes carried out in relatively short spray chambers or similar devices. The
Murphree liquid efficiency can be related to basic mass-transfer parameters by inter-
changing vapor and liquid terms in the equations already presented for the Murph-
ree vapor efficiency.
From Eqs. (12-12) and (12-32) solved for (1/£MK) - 1 and (1/£MJ - 1, it can
be shown that the relationship between EMV and EML for a linear equilibrium and
constant vapor and liquid flows is given by
T~-1 (12'33)
&MV
where X is equal to K< V/L and Kt is the equilibrium constant for the component
under consideration. Inspection of Eq. (12-33) shows that EMV will be substantially
less than £ML when A is large, i.e., when the system tends to be liquid-phase-
controlled, provided the efficiencies are less than 1.00. Similarly, £WL will be substan-
tially less than £M, when A is much less than unity, which corresponds to the system
tending toward gas-phase control.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 639
Overall Efficiency
The efficiency most commonly used for quick and rough calculations is the overall
efficiency 壉, defined simply as the ratio of the number of equilibrium stages required
for a specified quality of separation at a specified reflux ratio to the actual number
of stages required for the separation
£0 = ^ (12-34)
This is the form of efficiency easiest to use for calculations since it necessitates only a
solution to the equilibrium-stage problem without the worry of applying an
efficiency in the computation of each individual stage. On the other hand, the overall
efficiency has the drawback of trying to represent the complex equilibration
processes on each stage by means of a single parameter which bears no direct
relationship to fundamental heat- and mass-transfer parameters. Also, use of the
overall efficiency with an equilibrium-stage analysis cannot yield reliable nonkey
splits. Prediction and correlation of overall efficiencies for plate distillation towers is
safest for cases where all the towers considered treat similar substances at similar
temperatures and similar reflux ratios and with similar tray diameters and designs.
The relationship between the overall efficiency and the Murphree vapor
efficiency for constant total phase flows and a linear equilibrium relationship in a
binary system (Lewis, 1936) is
_ In [1 + 壉,(/-!)]
£°- ~1r7A~ ( !
Note that the parameter A affects this relationship strongly.
Vaporization Efficiency
Holland (1963) and coworkers have employed yet another definition of plate
efficiency, called vaporization efficiency, which can be used in a simple fashion for
computations. The efficiency £,p for component / on plate p is defined as
£U'i. out, pjav ,.~ ,,>
ip-T~7Z -- T (12-36)
â¢-JpV*l, out, p/av
Thus the "effective" Kip to be used in a computation allowing for lack of complete
equilibration is equal to EipK!p. Holland further suggests that
EiP = EJP (12-37)
where £, is characteristic of component / and has the same value on all plates and /Jr
is characteristic of plate p and is the same for all components. Although this
approach is simple to use, it does not correspond in a direct fashion to fundamental
mass- and heat-transfer phenomena. As a result it can be expected that values of Eip
will be difficult to predict independently or to correlate and that the indicated values
of £, and /?p may vary substantially. Consideration of the use of efficiencies defined by
Eq. (12-36) for a binary distillation shows that £lp for the more volatile component
640 SEPARATION PROCESSES
must generally increase as its concentration increases and must be very nearly equal
to unity near the top of the column. Thus the value of Eip will change throughout the
column even though the heat- and mass-transfer coefficients do not change
appreciably.
Hausen Efficiency
Hausen (1953) and others have defined an efficiency based upon the approach to the
products from a stage which would have been obtained if equilibrium had been
achieved with the given feeds:
r-
'~
/A,ou[.av y\. in
v»
.oiitJ ~-XA.in
Here (.VA.OUI)* and (.\-A _ââ,)* are the compositions which would have been obtained if
the given feed(s) to the stage had achieved complete equilibrium. This definition is
different from the definition of the Murphree vapor or liquid efficiency. The deno-
minator of the £, expression is based upon the vapor composition which would have
been in equilibrium with the liquid composition occurring in an equilibrium flash of
the feeds, whereas the denominator of the Murphree vapor efficiency is based upon
the vapor composition which would be in equilibrium with the actual exiting liquid.
Standart (1965) has examined this definition of efficiency at length and has
modified the expression for £, to take into account any changes in total phase flow
rates which may occur across the stage:
_ 'p
~~
'p.VA.oul.av ~~ 'p+lsA,in _ ^p-^A.out,av p~ !⢠A.in
\* - V V ~~ I *tv \* â I V ~
mtt) Kp+l>A.in LplvA.oulJ ^p- 1-XA. in
Here V* and L* are the total vapor and liquid flows which would leave stage p if full
equilibrium were obtained with the given feeds.
One advantage of the definition of efficiency given by Eq. (12-38) for constant
molal flows and by Eq. (12-39) for varying molal flows is that the expressions are the
same whether vapor or liquid compositions are used for the definition.
The term £, is somewhat more difficult to use than EM\ when a countercurrent
cascade is being analyzed, since a determination of the denominators of Eqs. (12-38)
and (12-39) involves the feeds entering the stage from both directions. On the other
hand, when a single-stage separation is being analyzed, £, can be used directly once
the equilibrium solution has been obtained, whereas the use of £MV or £M; requires
iteration.
In any real contacting situation, £, will most likely be substantially influenced by
A; £, is based in concept upon the maximum change in composition which can be
achieved either in cocurrent plug flow or in a vessel where both phases are well
mixed. For both these situations, however, £, depends upon A. For example, for
cocurrent plug flow with a linear equilibrium expression, a binary mixture, and
constant phase flows it can be shown that
£.= l _ e-u+iKim'too (12.40)
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 641
When both phases are well mixed,
(1+A)(NTU)OC
The relationship between EMV and E, is given by
COMPROMISE BETWEEN EFFICIENCY AND CAPACITY
In the design and operation of any separation device it is necessary to strike a
compromise between factors promoting efficiency or degree of separation, on the one
hand, and factors promoting a high flow capacity, on the other. A high stage
efficiency is obtained through high mass-transfer coefficients, and high mass-transfer
coefficients, in turn, are obtained through intensive agitation and mixing, which
bring with them a high pressure drop per unit length of flow path. High stage
efficiencies can also be obtained by providing a long contact time between phases in
the separation device, but a long contact time corresponds to larger equipment
volumes and to longer flow paths. Longer flow paths also give a greater pressure
drop.
For gas-liquid contacting in a plate tower, a higher plate efficiency can be ob-
tained with a greater weir height, but this increases the pressure drop per stage and
gives a greater tendency toward flooding because of the greater backup of liquid in
the downcomer. The intensity of contact and hence the stage efficiency generally
increase with increasing vapor velocity for the spray regime until the entrainment
and/or flooding limits are approached. A factor favoring high plate efficiency in the
froth regime is a greater froth height, like that obtained with a surface-tension-
gradient positive system. This greater froth height will give increased tendencies
toward flooding and entrainment, however.
The various expressions relating stage efficiency to the number of transfer units
show a decreasing value of additional transfer units as the number of transfer units
becomes greater. Typically the stage efficiency varies as the group 1 â e (NTU'°G
Since providing additional transfer units generally means creating a greater pressure
drop and a more severe capacity limit, it is advisable to provide a number of transfer
units in a stage which brings the system to the point of diminishing returns and no
farther. For example, it generally works well to give 1 â "c a value in the
range of 0.6 to 0.85. Making this term larger will require a substantially greater
number of additional transfer units per absolute gain in stage efficiency. Providing so
few transfer units that this term comes out much less than 0.6 to 0.85 probably will
make it necessary to use a significantly greater number of stages, and it is usually
cheapest to provide a given number of transfer units in as few stages as possible.
Choosing an overdesign factor to allow for uncertainties in stage efficiency and
column capacity is discussed in Appendix D.
642 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Cyclically Operated Separation Processes
Cyclic operation involves continual change of operating parameters, e.g., flow rates,
so that a process never achieves a steady state. For extraction, distillation, and some
similar processes cycling can lead to higher capacity and/or greater stage efficiency.
In cyclic distillation there is a period during which vapor flows upward but
liquid does not flow, followed by a period when liquid flows downward but the vapor
does not flow. A similar procedure is used for cyclic extraction. Experiments (Szabo
et al.. 1964: Schrodt. 1967: Schrodt et al., 1967; Gerster and Schull. 1970: Breuer
et al.. 1977) show that a marked increase in the capacity of a given size column is
possible and that an increase in the degree of separation provided by a given column
height can be obtained for extraction and, in some cases at least, for distillation. The
capacity increase is associated with the lack of a need for continuous counterflow of
the contacting phases, with a reduction in flooding tendencies which is more than
enough to offset the fact that each phase flows for only a fraction of the time.
Theoretical analyses of the apparent stage efficiency during cyclical operation (Rob-
inson and Engel. 1967: Sommerfeld et al.. 1966; May and Horn. 1968: Horn and
May. 1968; Rivas. 1977) show that an enhanced separation provided by a given
number of stages can result from gradients in composition in the liquid flowing
across a plate, much as incomplete mixing of the liquid in the direction of flow can
cause the Murphree vapor efficiency to be greater than the point efficiency. Belter
and Speaker (1967) and Lovland (1968) have shown that the analysis of a cyclically
operated multistage extraction process is similar to that for the fully countercurrent
version of the Craig distribution apparatus, counter-double-current distribution
(CDCD; see Fig. 4-43).
Cyclic operation of a large-scale distillation or extraction column presents a
number of major control difficulties: in fact, it is the control problem which has
primarily held back the use of cyclically operated separation processes. Wade et al.
(1969) discuss some approaches to control of these operations.
Pulsing is a form of rapid cycling which has proved effective for decreasing axial
mixing and increasing contacting efficiency in extractors where equipment volume is
of prime concern (Treybal. 1973).
Countercurrent vs. Cocurrent Operation
A cocurrcnt packed column can give at best the degree of separation corresponding
to one equilibrium stage, whereas a countercurrent packed column can give a degree
of separation corresponding to a large number of equilibrium stages. Countercurrent
devices, however, are subject to the capacity limit of flooding, whereas this phen-
omenon does not occur in cocurrent systems. Therefore cocurrent contacting can be
more desirable when only a single stage, or less, of contacting is needed.
Cocurrent contacting may also be desirable when the action of more than one
equilibrium stage is required but the number of equilibrium stages is not great.
Absorption with simultaneous chemical reaction in the liquid phase is a case in point.
As noted in Example 10-2, Murphree vapor efficiencies are very low for the absorp-
tion of carbon dioxide into ethanolamines in plate towers. Thus about 30 plates may
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES: STAGE EFFICIENCY 643
be required in practice for a carbon dioxide-ethanolamine absorber, even though the
separation required corresponds to only two or three equilibrium stages, as was the
case in Example 10-2. This very low Murphree vapor efficiency results from the large
amount of mass transfer required, in comparison to the small driving force provided
by the physical solubility of carbon dioxide.
The efficiency of contacting cannot be increased greatly in a countercurrent
packed or plate column because of the capacity limit caused by flooding. One alter-
native absorber configuration would be a countercurrent arrangement of perhaps
three smaller packed columns, each operated with the gas and liquid in cocurrent
flow within the tower. Thus we have a countercurrent cascade of cocurrent stages.
With cocurrent flow the superficial gas and liquid velocities can be a factor of 10 or
more greater than is possible with countercurrent flow. Reiss (1967) and others have
shown that much higher mass-transfer coefficients are obtained under these condi-
tions because of the intense agitation due to the greater flow velocities. It is possible
that in a number of cases the smaller volume of equipment required would more than
offset the complexity of arranging a few cocurrent packed towers in such a way as to
give countercurrent flow between the towers. Zhavoronkov et al. (1969) and others
have proposed distillation devices wherein cocurrent contacting of vapor and liquid
is achieved on each stage of a countercurrently staged single column.
A Case History
The separation of ethylbenzene from styrene (the monomer for the manufacture of
polystyrene plastics) by distillation represents an interesting case where a crucial
compromise must be made between factors governing efficiency and capacity of a
distillation column. As shown in Figs. 12-28 and 12-29, styrene is manufactured from
ethylbenzene by catalytic dehydrogenation (Stobaugh, 1965). Fresh and recycle
ethylbenzene are mixed with superheated steam and fed to a catalyst-containing
reactor at 650 to 750°C and a pressure near atmospheric. In the reactor ethylbenzene
is converted into hydrogen and styrene at a conversion of 35 to 40 percent per pass:
* V-= + H2
Ethylbenzene Styrene
Cooling steps following the reactor separate condensed steam from hydrocarbon
product, and then separate condensed aromatics from the hydrogen product and
other light hydrocarbon gases. The reaction selectivity is over 90 percent to styrene;
however, some benzene and toluene are formed as cracking by-products and must be
removed as a first distillation step. The following towers separate styrene from un-
converted ethylbenzene and from heavier tars (polymerization by-products).
The separation of ethylbenzene from styrene presents unique difficulties. Styrene
polymerizes readily and can therefore foul the reboiler, bottom trays, etc. Even in the
presence of polymerization inhibitors, styrene polymerizes at temperatures greater
than about 100°C. As a result it is necessary to run the ethylbenzene-styrene column
under vacuum to hold temperatures down. On the other hand, the relative volatility
644 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Water
Refrigerant
Steam
»- Vent gases
(H,.etc.)
Styrene product
Figure 12-28 Typical process for manufacture of styrene from ethylbenzene. I Adapted from Stobaugh.
, p. 140: used b\- permission.)
of ethylbenzene to styrene is not great, and so a large number of plates is required for
the distillation. Consequently there is a large pressure drop through the tower, and
this factor places a lower limit on the absolute pressure in the reboiler and hence on
the reboiler temperature. If steps are taken to reduce the pressure drop per plate, the
plate efficiency may also drop, with the result that more plates are required and the
pressure drop goes back up.
A history of efforts to cope with the efficiency and capacity problems associated
with ethylbenzene-styrene distillation has been given by Frank (Frank, 1968; Frank
et al.. 1969) and is reproduced here.t
t Joseph C. Frank, Early Developments in Styrene Process Distillation Column Design, in "Profes-
sors' Workshop on Industrial Monomer and Polymer Engineering." The Dow Chemical Company.
Midland. Michigan. 1968. Reprinted with permission of The Dow Chemical Company.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 645
Figure 12-29 A section of Dow Chemical's styrene complex. (Dow Chemical USA, Midland, Michigan.)
In the development of the Dow styrene process using the catalytic dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene,
one of the most important process unit operations is distillation. In the alkylation section distillation
columns separate the benzene and polycthylbenzenes for recycle and produce an ethylbenzene of
over 99 weight percent purity.
With the ethylbenzene dehydrogenation step giving a crude product of about 40 weight percent
styrene, distillation columns are used to separate and purify the benzene and toluene, separate for
recycle the ethylbenzene and purify a styrene monomer to ever increasing purity specifications.
The most difficult fractionation problem encountered is the separation of styrene from the
unreacted ethylbenzene. With an atmospheric boiling point for ethylbenzene of 136.2°C and for
styrene of 145.2°C. the temperature difference for this distillation is 9°C, and the relative volatility is
less than 1.3. Vacuum operation improves this relative volatility to the range of y = 1.34 to 1.40.
Today this would be considered an easy distillation column design problem, but in the early 1930's it
was a very difficult design problem. In addition, styrene monomer as the bottom product of this
distillation step polymerizes rapidly at the temperatures encountered in the distillation column even
at the best vacuum conditions commercially available.
The first step in solving this problem was the development of an efficient inhibitor to this
polymerization and adding this inhibitor to the distillation column with the feed and reflux streams.
Sulfur was the inhibitor used and adding it high in the distillation column was one of the basic Dow
patents on this process.
The first commercial styrene plant had a single shower deck low-pressure-drop column to make
the ethylbenzenc-styrene separation. Because of poor efficiency, this column proved inadequate and
a second section was added. Later, a third section was added with 3-inch bubble cap tray design.
Even operating with these three sections in series, the separation was inadequate with 2 to 5"D
ethylbenzene in the bottom product. This ethylbenzene had to be removed in the batch finishing
stills.
A careful study of the problem at this point showed that, to make the required separation
between ethylbenzene and styrene. at least 70 of the most efficient design bubble cap trays available
646 SEPARATION PROCESSES
were necessary. Even with the use of small 3-in. diameter caps and low slot immersion, the pressure
drop with this number of trays was too high. With the minimum overhead vacuum of 35 mm Hg
which would allow for condensing of the ethylbenzene in a water-cooled condenser, the column
pressure drop was too high to give a satisfactory reboiler temperature.
From laboratory checks of the rate of polymerization of styrene monomer and of the reaction
rate for the sulfur-styrene reaction under conditions encountered in the reboiler, it was decided that
the bottoms temperature in this column must be held below 90°C. Later experience and data have
shown that the operation is satisfactory at a much higher temperature if the residence time is kept
low, but, at that time. 90°C was set as the maximum design temperature.
Efficient bubble cap trays could be designed for 3 mm Hg per tray pressure drop: therefore for
70 actual trays, this would give a column pressure drop of 210 mm Hg. If the minimum top pressure
is 35 mm Hg then the reboiler pressure would be 245 mm Hg. The resultant temperature was 108 to
110°C and was much too high.
Overhead
16,7001b/hr
0.2% ethylbenzene
((12-30)) _ (100.000 + 16,700 + 58,700)( 163) -ââ.....
Steam requirement - (940)(10850T' ~ = ^ StyrCne
Figure 12-30 Primary-secondary column system for styrene. (Adapted from Frank et a/., 1969. p. SO:
used by permission.)
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 647
Figure 12-31 Three sets of primary-secondary column distillation units for styrene at the Dow Midland
Plant. < Dow Chemical USA, Midland, Michigan.)
After the study of several schemes, it was decided to split the required trays into two columns
operating in series with complete condensing of the overhead vapors of each column so that vacuum
of 35 mm Hg could be maintained at the top of each column. This split was made with 41 trays in the
primary column and 35 trays in the secondary column since the most critical bottom temperature
was that in the secondary column.
[Figure 12-30] shows this primary and secondary column set up with a typical set of operating
data. A photograph of three such two-tower units is shown in [Fig. 12-31]. The first unit was put into
operation at the Midland styrene plant in 1941. The operation of this system was an immediate
success. With 76 bubble cap trays and 6 to 1 reflux ratio (and lower) they gave good separation with
the ethylbenzene being removed from the bottoms so that the first overhead product from the batch
stills was specification styrene. and within a few years we were finishing most of the styrene monomer
in a continuous finishing still feeding secondary bottoms.
Additional plants using the primary and secondary column system came rapidly as the World
War II Rubber Program styrene plants were built and started up in 1943 with eight sets of these stills
in the Texas plant, four sets in the Los Angeles plant, and two sets in the Sarnia plant of Polymer
Corporation. Also, all of our styrene know-how was furnished through government agencies (Rubber
Reserve Co.) to our competitors at that time.
At the same time we were installing a second unit in the Midland plant and after the end of
World War II, a third larger unit was installed at Midland using 76 bubble cap trays with 41 trays in
the primary and 35 trays in the secondary. The operating data are shown in [Fig. 12-30]. Also in 1961
a new distillation unit was installed in the Texas plant with a primary and secondary column, with 50
dual flow trays in each column.
The primary-secondary column system with condensing and reboiling of the vapors between
the columns takes more steam and cooling water (or air) utilities than a single column. If the reflux
ratio or L/V below the feed tray is maintained the same in the secondary as in the primary column,
then the steam required will be twice that required in a single column system.
When designing the primary and secondary column system, it was noted from study of the
648 SEPARATION PROCESSES
McCabe-Thiele diagram that the reflux in the secondary column could be much lower with the
requirement of only two or three more trays in this section. Almost all secondary columns have been
designed in this manner with the steam load on the secondary at about 65",, of that required for
the primary column. You will also note [Fig. 12-30] that the secondary column is smaller in
diameter, i.e.. 9-foot diameter as compared with an 11-foot diameter for the primary column.
The use of a single column for the ethylbenzene-styrene separation had often been discussed
after our styrene know-how became more extensive, and it was found that these columns could be
operated at higher pressure and higher bottoms temperatures. The sieve tray or valve tray could be
designed for lower pressure drop (in the range of 2 mm Hg per tray), but we were never convinced
that tray efficiencies could be obtained in a high enough range to give the required separation. The
sieve tray design was very difficult because most design data were extrapolated from atmospheric
pressure correlations. Also with the low design pressure the sieve tray is very close to the weeping
range and, furthermore, requires a minimum foam (or liquid) depth on the tray. Either of these
conditions can give poor tray efficiency.
We had several reports in the 1950's of our competitors using a single column for this separa-
tion with valve tray design, but results were not available to us, and reports on operation did not
appear to be very good.
Figure 12-32 Two duplicate single-column distillation units for the separation of ethylbenzene and
styrene each using 70 Linde sieve trays. (Dow Chemical USA, Midland, Michigan.)
I
a
u â
E!
\
is
â in
80 r*
J=
V.
E
X
-
8
j-.
r1
»/"*
ri
c*
U
a. o£
**
ri UJ
£
~l _j
~~
â¢i
Lo^
A
^J
/
m
UJ
f^
V
a:
/
r~-
Q
K
S**
~t v\ o
LUl/iH
Ex
oâ .
BO"â
3i
_
_
c
c
u
o*
£
->
0
c
=
3
r-
K
~
=
5
3
5
*,
c
â ?
r-i
650 SEPARATION PROCESSES
1935
â 1
-I
-3
1940
1945
1950 1955
Years
1960
1965
1970
Figure 12-34 Learning curves for Midland plant styrene-ethylbenzene distillation units. (Dow Chemical
USA, Midland, Michigan.)
In 1963 the Linde Division of Union Carbide announced that they were offering for sale their
know-how on sieve tray design which had been developed over the years in their design of oxygen
and liquid air plants. The Dow Surma plant was at this time actively working on a styrene plant
expansion and sent out an inquiry to Linde among others. Mr. Garrett and Mr Bruckert of Linde
came to Sarnia in January 1964 and outlined their tray design know-how and made preliminary
proposals for design of a single column unit for the ethylbenzene-styrene separation. Linde required
a secrecy agreement before making a formal proposal. The agreement was made and. after a formal
proposal was made, the first order with Linde for a single column using Linde Trays was placed for
the Sarnia plant.
In March 1964, Linde was invited to come to Midland to present their story and make
proposals for two columns for Midland's planned plant modernization. The Linde proprietary
additions to the standard sieve tray along with their design experience and engineering know-how in
tray design appeared to be the break-through required for the successful design of a single column for
the ethylbenzene-styrene separation. Linde had already designed a single column unit for the I'nion
Carbide styrene monomer plant at Seadrift. Texas, which would be in operation before our design
was finalized. There was extensive discussion and study of the Linde Tray design by Dow Engineers
which was climaxed by a demonstration by Linde at their Tonawanda Laboratory comparing the
weeping tendency and stability of the Linde Tray as compared to a more standard sieve tray. This
demonstration was convincing enough so that we gave Linde the go-ahead approval on the Midland
columns in the summer of 1964. and the formal order was placed in January 1965. Also added to the
same agreement was an order for one column in Texas and two columns for the Terneuzen styrene
plant.
The two units for single column ethylbenzene-styrene distillation were started up in Midland in
late 1965 and have met all production plant requirements from that date up to the present time.
[Figure 12-32] is a photograph of these columns, and [Fig. 12-33] shows typical operating data for
the columns at maximum production rates.
In summary, we like to show our improvements in chemical process know-how in what we call
a "Learning Curve." [Figure 12-34] shows our learning curve improvements in the styrene distilla-
tion process.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 651
Acknowledgment. The accomplishments discussed here have come from the cooperative efforts
of many engineers and scientists, and the author gratefully acknowledges their contributions and
wishes to thank The Dow Chemical Company for permission to publish this discussion.
The improvements which make the Linde sieve trays particularly suitable for this
service are the bubbling promoters, slotted trays, and design for parallel flow on
consecutive trays described by Weiler et al. (1973) and Smith and Delnicki (1975).
Winter and Uitti (1976) describe another instance of poor tray performance in
ethylbenzene-styrene distillation where a problem of weeping and liquid-flow maldis-
tribution was solved by using a froth initiator (similar to the bubbling promoter) and
a larger inlet weir. Stage (1970) explores tray-design alternatives and resulting perfor-
mance for ethylbenzene-styrene distillation in considerable detail.
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654 SEPARATION PROCESSES
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PROBLEMS
12-A, Results have been reported for the performance of a new type of distillation contacting tray. Air
was passed upward through a single tray and a large excess of pure ethylene glycol was passed in cross
flow over the tray The temperature of the feeds and of the entire tray was uniform at 53°C. at which the
vapor pressure of ethylene glycol is 133 Pa. Measurements showed that the exit air contained a mole
fraction of glycol equal to 0.00100. the pressure of operation being 101.3 kPa.
(a) What is the Murphree vapor efficiency of the tray?
(/>) If a tower were built using these same trays and the same glycol and airflow rates, how many
(rays would be required to make the exit air 99.0 percent saturated with ethylene glycol? Neglect pressure
drop in the tower and assume operation at 53°C and atmospheric pressure (101.3 kPa).
(<â¢) What would be the orcrall tray efficiency of the tower of part (b)?
(d) What would be the effect on the number of trays required in part (h) if the degree of backmixing
of glycol on each tray were markedly increased?
12-B, Figure 12-33 shows a single-column operation for vacuum distillation ofethylbenzeneand styrene.
(a) What feature of the process causes the purity of the styrene product to be so much greater than
the purity of the ethylben/ene product?
(h) The vapor flow above the feed does not differ much percentwise from the vapor flow below the
feed, yet the design has made the tower diameter above the feed substantially greater than that below the
feed. Why was this design chosen?
12-C2 Account physically for the sign (plus or minus) of each of the terms in (a) Eq. (12-7). (b) Eq. (12-8),
(c) Eq. (12-10). and (d) Eq. (12-29).
12-D2 Derive (a) Eq. (12-42). (b) Eq. (12-40). and (c) Eq. (12-41).
12-E, What change or changes in tray design would be most effective for increasing the plate efficiency of
one or both of the towers in Example 12-2 without excessive extra expense?
12-Fj A processing modification being installed in your plant requires the quantitative removal of isobu-
tane from a stream of hydrogen at 200 Ib in; abs. Two packed columns currently idle in the plant are
being considered for use in a scheme whereby the isobutane would be absorbed into a heavy hydrocarbon
oil. The hydrocarbon oil would be regenerated by stripping with nitrogen and would be recirculated. One
of the two towers is 18-in ID and can contain a packed-bed height of up to 20 ft. The other tower is 3 ft ID
and can contain a packed height of up to 12 ft. Both can operate continuously at pressures from 20 to
200 Ib in2 abs. No heat exchangers are available: hence it is proposed that both towers will operate at
80°F. For operation of hydrocarbon systems at these conditions it has been found that (HTU)0(; is
approximately 2 ft.
(a) What would be the capacity of this two-tower system, expressed as standard cubic feet (60°F)of
purified hydrogen per hour?
(b) How sensitive is the capacity to the estimate of (HTU),,,,: that is. what would be the capacity if
(HTU)oC were 3 ft?
Data and notes (1) The feed hydrogen contains 1.0 mole percent isobutane; the purified hydrogen must
contain no more than 0.05 mole percent isobutane. (2) AC ( = .V/.x) for isobutane in hydrocarbon oils at
80°F is given by Sherwood and Pigford (1950. p. 191) as
Pressure, atm
0.5
1
2
5
10
25
K
7.2
3.6
1.85
0.81
0.46
0.27
(3) The gas rates in the towers should be no more than 75 percent of the flooding gas velocity at the
prevailing L/G. The packing will be dumped 1-in. Pall rings for both towers; a/i1 for this packing is
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 655
45 ft2/ft3. (4) For the hydrocarbon oil at 80°F, the specific gravity is 0.78 and the viscosity is 2.5 cP. The
average molecular weight is 200.
12-G2 Hay and Johnson (1960) studied the performance of sieve trays in the rectification of methanol-
water mixtures in an 8-in-diameter five-tray column. From measurements made at total reflux they
inferred values of both Murphree vapor and point efficiencies £M, and Emi as a function of average vapor
composition. Results were as follows:
Av. mol "â
MeOH in vapor
10
20
30
40
60
EOG
0.66
0.69
0.72
0.73
0.74
E
1.04
0.95
0.87
0.83
0.82
Source: Data from Hay and Johnson, 1960.
Explain, as best you can on the basis of limited data, (a) why £â, is greater than £OG, (h) why Eoc
increases with increasing mole fraction methanol, and (r) why £Ml decreases with increasing mole fraction
methanol.
12-H2 Frank states in reviewing the primary-plus-secondary column system for styrene-ethylbenzene
distillation^
It was noted from study of the McCabe-Thiele diagram that the reflux in the secondary column could
be much lower with the requirement of only two or three more trays in this section. Almost all
secondary columns have been designed in this manner with the steam load on the secondary at about
65 percent of that required for the primary column.
Demonstrate the basis for this statement.
12-I2 Finch and Van Winkle (1964) measured tray efficiencies for the evaporation of methanol from water
into humidified air. They employed simple sieve plates made by boring a succession of holes (on the order
of 5 mm diameter) into plates of 20-gauge stainless steel. Operation was isothermal at 33°C and atmo-
spheric pressure, with the mole fraction of methanol in the effluent liquid held constant at about 0.04. They
determined the effects of five variables, changing each independently:
Hole diameter d
Vapor flow G
Liquid flow L
Weir height W
Tray length between inlet and outlet weirs Z,
1.6-8.0 mm
1.1 3.0 kgs-(m2 active bubbling area)
1.1 3.7 kg/s-(m liquid flow width)
2.5-12.5 cm
28-58 cm
They measured both Murphree vapor efficiencies (壉, , based on gross inlet and outlet compositions and
ranging from 75 to 97 percent) and point efficiencies (EOG, based on compositions at a particular location
on a tray and ranging from 69 to 93 percent). Over their range of investigation they found that
1. Both £â, and £,,G decrease with increasing G.
2. Both EM> and Emi increase with increasing L.
3. Both £M, and £,)G increase with increasing W.
4. £oc increases slightly with increasing Z,, whereas £MV. increases substantially more with increasing
Z,.
(a) Does the plate efficiency in the range of conditions covered in this study appear to be pre-
dominantly gas-phase- or liquid-phase-controlled? Explain.
(b) Why does £oc increase with increasing Z,?
t From Frank, 1968; used by permission.
656 SEPARATION PROCESSES
100 i-
o. 50
s
U)
Figure 12-35 Variation of Murphree vapor efficiency with gas flow rate. (Data from Finch and Van
Winkle, 1964.)
(c) Why does 壉, increase more rapidly with increasing Z, then EOG does?
I"' I In relating their measurements to past studies of similar systems on sieve plates, Finch and Van
Winkle indicate that as the gas rate is increased from zero (at fixed /.. u. and /, I. the efficiency is initially
quite low (see Fig. 12-35). After a certain point A the efficiency rises sharply from almost zero to a maximum
B. After passing the maximum the efficiency falls off slowly with increasing gas rate until a sudden rapid fall
is reached at C as entrainment or flooding begins to reduce efficiency. Suggest causes for the indicated
behavior below A, between A and B, and between B and C.
12-J2 There have been virtually no tests reported for the applicability of the AIChE efficiency prediction
method to high-pressure light-hydrocarbon systems. In addition, the extent to which the AIChE correlat-
ing equations for tra'nsfer units are applicable to trays other than bubble-cap trays has not been reported
in any detail. A recent field test of a propylene-propane splitter (the one considered in Prob. 8-J) afforded
the following results:
Average operating pressure = 1.86 MPa Overhead temperature = 44°C,
Bottom temperature = 55°C Reflux ratio Lid = 21.5
Propylene purity = 96.2 mol "â Propane purity = 91.1 mol "â
Propylene in feed = 50.45 mol "â Feed rate = 530 bbl/day (satd liquid)
The tower diameter is 48 in with 90 sieve trays, the feed being introduced to the forty-fifth. Tray spacing is
18 in. Details of construction are the following, as shown in Fig. 12-36.
Weir length = 36.7 in Downcomer width at bottom = 6.5 in
Weir height = 2.0 in ^-in holes on ^-in triangular pitch 4970 holes/tray
Analysis of the equilibrium-stage requirement (Prob. 8-J) reveals that 85 equilibrium stages are required
to give the observed split with the given feed tray.
Compare the observed stage efficiency with that predicted by the AIChE bubble-tray design method.
Data and notes Barrels of feed (1 bbl = 42 gal) are measured at 15.5°C, where the specific gravities of
propylene and propane are 0.522 and 0.508. respectively.
Propylene
Propane
Critical temperature. °C
91.4
96.9
Critical pressure. MPa
4.60
4.25
Specific gravity satd liquid at 49°C
0.458
, 0.453
Viscosity of satd liquid, cP
0.086t
0.080}
Vapor viscosity at 49°C and 1.86 MPa, cP
0.0108
0.0108
Vapor diffusivity at 49°C and 1.86 MPa, m2/s
3.9 x 10" 7
3.9 x 10-'
Liquid-phase diffusivity on the order of 1 x 10 " m2/s
t At 45°C. { At 55°C.
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 657
Perforated area
c
--f.
-T
\
I
C
00
6.5 in.â
(a) (b)
Figure 12-36 Tray layout for Probs. 12-J and 12-K: (a) top and (b) side view.
12-K2 At what percentage of the ultimate feed capacity at the given reflux ratio was the tower of
Prob. 12-J being run during the field test of Prob. 12-J? Use the predictions of the correlations given in
this chapter.
12-L2 There are several different reboiler designs employed in current practice, the choice of a particular
design being governed by the particular processing requirements. Among the many criteria influencing
reboiler selection is the fact that certain reboiler designs are more effective than others in providing an
additional full equilibrium stage of vapor-liquid contacting. (This point also has a direct bearing on the
temperature to which liquid must be raised within the reboiler.) In Fig. 12-37 four common reboiler
designs are shown which you should analyze and contrast by the above criterion of providing an addi-
tional equilibrium stage. In each of the systems L represents the overflow from the first tray. B is the
bottoms product, F is the reboiler feed, V is the reboiler vapor output, and u is the unvaporized liquid
returning from the reboiler; LC refers to a level controller which regulates the withdrawal of net bottoms.
Types 1, 2, and 3 are thermosiphon reboilers, which return liquid along with vapor and for good heat
transfer can vaporize no more than 30 percent of the reboiler feed. The total volume liquid holdup is
the same in all cases. Steam passes through the reboiler shell in cases 1 to 3 and through the tubes in case 4.
Rank these schemes in the order of increasing additional separation obtained in the reboiler.
12-M3 (a) Suppose that for the H2S CO2 ethanolamine absorber of Example 10-2 the values of (NTU)0
and (NTU), were constant at 1.50 and 0.45, respectively, from plate to plate for CO2. Determine what
£MV. would be on the bottom plate and on the top plate, respectively.
(b) Develop a block diagram for a computer program which would perform the stage-to-stage
calculation of part (b) of Example 10-2, using constant values of (NTU)C and (NTU), for both solutes
rather than average values of EMY .
(r) Explain physically why (NTU), might be so low.
12-N, It has frequently been observed that stage efficiencies for plate-type gas absorption columns tend to
be significantly less than stage efficiencies for distillation in similar columns. Walter and Sherwood (1941)
measured Murphree vapor efficiencies for a number of systems in a small 5-cm bench-scale bubble-cap
column. As shown in Table 12-4, Evv for the absorption of propylene and isobutylene into gas oi/t
ranged from 11 to 17 percent whereas £M, for ethanol-water distillation ranged from 88 to 91 percent. All
their runs were conducted well below the flooding point, and entrainment was not a significant factor. The
gas diffusivities do not differ greatly between the systems. The liquid-phase diffusivity is approximately a
factor of six higher in the distillation system than in the absorption system.
t Gas oil is a hydrocarbon mixture, bp = 230 to 350°C, average MW = 210, viscosity = 6.2 mPa-s,
and sp gr = 0.86 at 25°C.
658 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Table 12-4 Efficiency data reported by Walter and Sherwood
(1941)
Distillation of cthanol-water:
Total reflux Pressure = 101.3 kPa (atmospheric)
V,H,OH = 0.05 leaving plate
Vapor flow, mol s
0.0236
0.0236
00246
0.0337
0.0454
£.MI
0.88
0.91
0.89
0.88
0.88
Absorption of propylene and isobutylene into gas oil at 25°C:
Gas flow = 0.098 mol s = 3.05 gs (MW = 31)
Liquid flow = 0.047 mol s = 9.S g s (MW = 210)
Pressure = 456 kPa (4.5 aim)
Solute
(K = y v)cl,
£.«i
Propylene
2.4
0.110
Isobutylene
0.66
0.174
(a) Interpreting on the basis of the concepts involved in the AlChE method for analyzing stage
efficiencies, indicate the principal plmical lactvr(s) of difference between the absorption and distillation
systems which probably cause(s) the values of £w, for the absorption process to be so much less than £â,
for the distillation process.
(/)) Why is Ev, for isobutylene absorption greater than £M, for propylene absorption?
12-O, A countercurrent sieve-plate stripping column with reboiler is to be used to remove low concentra-
tions (less than 0.5 mole percent) of n-butyl acetate from water. The operating pressure will be either
atmospheric (101.3 kPa), or a moderate level of vacuum, say. 25 kPa. In either case, the temperature will
be the thermodynamic saturation temperature of water. The relative volatility of fi-butyl acetate to water
in both cases is in the range 500 to 1000. The vapor rate in the stripper will be equal to 10 percent of the
purified-watcr product flow rate in both cases. The Murphree vapor efficiency is substantially less than 100
percent.
(a) Is the Murphree vapor efficiency for this process likely to be gas-phase-controlled or liquid-phase
controlled? Explain briefly.
(b) Which of the operating pressures under consideration should require the larger column
diameter? Why?
12-P2 An ethylene-ethane distillation column operates at an average pressure of 2.5 MPa and has a
temperature range of 238 to 279 K. Sieve plates are used, with a hole diameter of 0.95 cm. an interplate
spacing of 0.61 m. an outlet weir height of 6.3 cm. a tower diameter of 1.30 m. and an operating capacity
60 percent of flooding. Analysis of the plate operation using the AIChF. plate-efficiency model gives the
following results:
(NTU)(, = 1.90 (NTU), = 9.35 Pe = 0.42
Entrainment = 0 / ( = mG L) ranges from 0.8 to 1.3
(a) What is the range of Murphree vapor efficiencies in the column?
(b) On the basis of the information given and the AIChE model, indicate which of the following
changes should serve to increase the Murphree vapor efficiency. Explain each answer briefly.
1. Increase the outlet weir height to 7.5 cm
CAPACITY OF CONTACTING DEVICES; STAGE EFFICIENCY 659
Rehoiler
Reboiler
Type I
Type 2
Kettle type
Reboiler
Type 3
Type 4
Figure 12-37 Rehoiler flow configurations. Type 3 is for use when V'jL is quite low, as in strippers.
2. Increase u0 (the volumetric gas flow per unit active tray bubbling area) while holding L (liquid flow per
unit flow width) constant, e.g., by decreasing the fraction of the tower cross section that is active
bubbling area
3. Decrease L while holding uu constant, e.g., by decreasing the fraction of the tower cross section that is
active bubbling area and decreasing the reflux and boil-up ratios simultaneously.
CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF
SEPARATION PROCESSES
The energy consumption is often a critical process parameter for a large-scale
separation.^ The cost of energy supply is usually a major contributor to the process
cost. Different classes of separation processes can have inherently different energy
consumptions, and this can be a critical factor in their selection. Understanding the
factors underlying energy consumption can often lead to ideas for lowering the
energy consumption, and the cost, of a process.
In this chapter we first develop the thermodynamic minimum energy consump-
tion for a specified separation and then explore the characteristics of different types
of single-stage and multistage separation processes as related to energy consumption.
This discussion is followed by consideration of ways of reducing energy consump-
tion. Some of these approaches are extremely simple, and others require relatively
complex designs.
t The discussion in this chapter postulates some familiarity with classical thermodynamics on the part
of the reader, particularly with regard to the second law and outgrowths of it. The concepts of rcversiblity.
free energy, available energy, and entropy are developed at greater length by B. F. Dodge. "Chemical
Engineering Thermodynamics." McGraw-Hill. New York. 1944; O. A. Hougen et al.. "Chemical Process
Principles." vol II. "Thermodynamics." 2d ed.. Wiley. New York, 1959; J. M. Smith and H. C. Van Ness.
"Introduction To Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics," 3d ed., McGraw-Hill. New York. 1975; M
W. Zemansky. " Heat and Thermodynamics." 5th ed.. McGraw-Hill. New York. 1968; and H. C Weber
and H. P. Meissner. "Thermodynamics for Chemical Engineers." Wiley. New York. 1959; among others
660
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 661
MINIMUM WORK OF SEPARATION
Mixing substances together is inherently an irreversible process. Substances can be
mixed spontaneously, but separation of homogeneous mixtures into two or more
products of different composition at the same temperature and pressure necessarily
requires some sort of device which consumes work and/or heat energy.
The minimum possible work consumption for a separation, no matter what
process is employed to accomplish it, is found by postulating a hypothetical rever-
sible process. One of the consequences of the second law of thermodynamics is that
any reversible process for accomplishing a given transformation has the same work
requirement and that the work requirement of any real process for carrying out the
separation is greater. The minimum reversible work requirement is dependent solely
upon the composition, temperature, and pressure of the mixture to be separated and
upon the desired composition, temperature, and pressure of the products; it is a state
property.
Isothermal Separations
As a generalization of the analyses presented by Dodge (1944), Robinson and Gilli-
land (1950), and Hougen et al. (1959) the minimum (reversible) mechanical work
required for separation of a homogeneous mixture into pure products at constant
pressure and constant temperature T is
Wmin, T = - R T £ A> In (7jf XJF) (13-1)
j
where W^jn T = minimum work consumption per mole of feed
R = gas constant
.\jF = mole fraction of component j in feed
-,-jf = activity coefficient of component j in feed mixture
The summation is over all components in the feed. If there are R components, there
are R pure products and R terms in the series. The convention for definition of the
activity coefficient is that 7, = 1 in the pure state. Equation (13-1) applies to gas,
liquid and solid mixtures. For gases 7JF denotes the degree of departure from the
ideal-gas law and the Lewis and Randall ideal-mixing rule.
For an ideal gas mixture or an ideal liquid solution Eq. (13-1) becomes
Wn*n.T=-RTZxjFlnXjF (13-2)
j
For a binary mixture Eq. (13-2) becomes
Wmin. T = -RT\x*F In XAF + (1 - .xAf ) In (1 - ,VAF)] (13-3)
Comparing Eqs. (13-1) and (13-2), we find that if there are positive deviations
from ideality, yA and yB will be greater than unity and the minimum isothermal work
requirement for separation will be less than that for an ideal mixture. Similarly, a
system with negative deviations from ideality requires a greater H^in than an ideal
system. Negative systems involve preferential interactions between dissimilar
662 SEPARATION PROCESSES
molecules and are therefore more difficult to separate. In Eq. (13-1) if y;f = l/xjf the
system is totally immiscible and the work of separation is zero; otherwise the isother-
mal work of separation must be positive.
Although the minimum work for separation depends upon the degree of solution
nonideality, it is important to note that it does not depend upon the separation factor
of the actual process postulated. For example, if a liquid mixture is to be separated by
a distillation process designed to be reversible, the work requirement of that process
does not depend upon the relative volatility.
The minimum work of separation of a feed mixture into impure products at
constant temperature and pressure can be computed by subtracting from Eq. (13-1)
the minimum works for separation of those impure products into pure products.
giving
A> In ()> A>) -£ & I xji In faiXjt) (13-4)
ij'
where 0, = molar fraction of feed entering product /
\ji = mole fraction of component j in product /
7j, = activity coefficient of component j in product i
For a given feed mixture, the work requirement given by Eq. (13-4) for separation
into impure products is necessarily less than that given by Eq. (13-1) for separation
into pure products.
For a binary mixture, if activity coefficients are taken equal to unity for simplic-
ity, and if the lever rule is used to generate values of 0, , algebraic rearrangement of
Eq. (13-4) yields
DT
'
X
.YA1ln-"- +(l-.vA1)ln
VAI
1 -x
AF
(13-5)
The solid curve in Fig. 13-1 shows Wm{n r/RT for separation of an ideal binary
mixture into pure products as a function of .YAF . Notice that an equimolal feed
mixture requires more work per mole of feed for isothermal isobaric separation into
pure components than a mixture of any other composition. The dashed curve in Fig.
13-1 gives Wmin , as a function of xAF for a binary feed where the product composi-
tions are ,\A1 = 0.95 and .xA2 = 0.20. Notice that the minimum work for the separa-
tion into impure products is substantially less than that for separation into pure
products.
Equations (13-1) to (13-5) assume that the products have the same temperature
and pressure as the feed. If pressure changes, one or more terms representing J V dP
must be added to these expressions for Wm^ T . For liquid mixtures at low pressures
the contribution of such terms (the Poynting effect) is usually small. For an ideal gas
with feed at pressure P, and products at pressure P2, tne expression for minimum
work becomes
. T = Wmln. T. i5obanc + R T to (13-6)
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 663
E i-
l\
0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
Figure 13-1 Minimum work of separation of a binary ideal liquid or gas mixture. (Solid curve = pure
products; dashed curve = .VA, = 0.95, .vA2 = 0.20.)
which shows that the minimum work requirement for an isothermal separation may
be zero or negative if P2 is less than P,. In this case the work required for separation
is derived from the work available from expansion. Since Wm^n T isobaric is necessarily
positive,
Wmin.T>/mn£ (13-7)
r\
indicating that the work available from a reversible expansion is reduced if a separa-
tion also occurs. Similarly, if there is a net compression, the minimum work require-
ment will be necessarily greater when a separation occurs than when no separation
occurs. One can postulate a process in which helium is removed from natural gas
available at 4 MPa from a gas well by selective diffusion across a glass or polymeric
membrane or through a sintered-metal diaphragm. In this case a separation occurs
without any heat input or compression work, but the separation is possible only
because the natural gas is available at a pressure P,, which is substantially greater
than the pressure P2 on the other side of the membrane or diaphragm, which could
be as low as atmospheric.
The minimum isothermal work of separation is also necessarily equal to the
increase in Gibbs free energy of the products over the feed. The Gibbs free energy G is
defined as
Therefore
G = H - TS
AGseo = Wmin. r = AH - T AS
'sep
(13-8)
(13-9)
where T = absolute temperature
AH = enthalpy of products minus enthalpy of feed
AS = entropy of the products minus entropy of feed
664 SEPARATION PROCESSES
For the isothermal separation of a mixture of ideal gases the enthalpy change is zero,
and the right-hand side of Eq. (13-2) represents the - T AS term of Eq. (13-9).
Nonisothermal Separations; Available Energy
When the products of a separation process are removed at temperatures different
from the feed temperature, the minimum work required for separation can be ob-
tained from the increase of available energy of the products with respect to the feed.
The available energy B, sometimes called the exergy in the European literature, is
defined as
B=H-T0S - (13-10)
where T0 is the absolute temperature of the surroundings, from or to which we
presume that heat can be transferred on essentially a free basis. Thus T0 is the
temperature of sea water or river water or is the prevailing atmospheric temperature.
The increase in available energy of products over the feed is a measure of the
minimum work required for separation when heat sources and sinks are available
only at temperature T0
AB^p = Wmin, To = A// - T0 AS (13-11)
This expression is different from Eq. (13-9) in that it allows for feeds and products
being at different temperatures. Equation (13-11) also does not reduce to Eq. (13-9)
for a separation giving products at the same temperature as the feed unless that
temperature is T0. This is a result of no longer considering that an infinite heat sink is
available at T. The case of a heat sink available at T0 is the more realistic considera-
tion for engineering purposes.
For separation of a mixture of ideal gases into pure components A// and AS for
use in Eq. (13-11) are given by
'cPJdT (13-12)
rj^dT-Rta-Z-} (13-13)
/.- ' J!F Ft
where CPj = heat capacities of various components
TF, PF = feed temperature and pressure
TJ, PJ = temperatures and pressures of various pure component products
For an isothermal separation with AW = 0, combination of Eqs. (13-9) and
(13-11) shows that Wm]n To is given by the various equations for Wm(a-T with RT
replaced by R T0.
Significance of Wm-in
The minimum work of separation represents a lower bound on the energy that must
be consumed by a separation process. In most cases the energy requirement for a real
process will be many times greater than this minimum. Nonetheless, the relative sizes
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 665
of the minimum work requirements for different separations are a first indication of
the relative difficulties of the separations. In some cases, e.g., the desalinization of sea
water on a large scale, the separation must be carried out with an energy consump-
tion rather close to the minimum work of separation in order to be economical. In
these situations the minimum work requirement is a highly significant quantity
which must be kept in mind during the synthesis and evaluation of different designs.
The concept of separative work is commonly used for the analysis of isotope-
enrichment processes (Benedict and Pigford, 1957) and is directly related to the
reversible-work requirement for separation (Opfell, 1978). In fact, the value of en-
riched uranium in the nuclear-fuel market is commonly stated in terms of the number
of separative work units (SWU) contained; they are quaintly known as swoos.
NET WORK CONSUMPTION
Often the energy to drive a separation process is supplied in the form of heat rather
than mechanical work. In such cases it is convenient to speak of the net work
consumption of the process, defined as the difference between the work that could
have been obtained with a reversible heat engine from the heat entering the system,
on the one hand, and the work that could be obtained in a reversible heat engine
from the heat leaving the system, on the other. The other heat source or sink of the
heat engines would be at the ambient T0.
In the separation process shown schematically in Fig. 13-2 the process is driven
by heat QH entering the system at a temperature TH. An amount of heat QL leaves the
system at a temperature TL. If QH were supplied to a reversible heat engine rejecting
heat at T0, an amount of work equal to
QH
TH-T0
could be obtained. Similarly, an amount of work equal to
Feed
Products
Figure 13-2 A separation process driven by
heat input.
666 SEPARATION PROCESSES
could be obtained from Q, . The net work consumption of the process Wn is
Wn = QllT^°-Q,.T^ (13-14)
'H '/.
It can be shown that Wn for any real separation is necessarily greater than ABS<.P and
will be equal to it only in the limit of a reversible separation process. If any mechani-
cal work is consumed by the process, it must be added into Eq. (13-14) directly.
If no mechanical work is involved in a separation process and the enthalpy
difference between products and feed is negligible compared with the heat input.
QH = QL = Q and
Wn = QT0(l--~\ (13-15)
V1L 'Hi
which is necessarily a positive quantity since TH must be greater than TL.
An ordinary distillation column is a good example of a separation process driven
by heat input. An amount of heat equal to QR enters at the reboiler at temperature
TK. Heat in the amount Qc is removed in the condenser at a temperature 7^. If the
enthalpy of the products is not substantially different from that of the feed, Eq.
(13-15) can be used to find Wa, with TH = TR and TL= Tc. When cooling water is
used to remove heat in the condenser, T, = T0 and Eq. (13-15) becomes
Wn = Q\\-^ (13-16)
TR necessarily will be above ambient in such a case, and Wn is therefore positive: Wn
also will be positive for a low-temperature refrigerated distillation column since TH is
still greater than T, in Eq. (13-15).
THERMODYNAMIC EFFICIENCY
A thermodynamic efficiency rj can be defined as the ratio of the minimum (reversible)
work consumption to the actual work consumption of a separation process. For a
separation driven by heat input at a high temperature and heat rejection at a lower
temperature
W ⢠T
n = m"-T( (13-17)
H
WJnin. TO 's obtained from Eq. (13-11) [or from Eq. (13-4) if the process is isothermal
and isobaric]. Wn is obtained from Eq. (13-14). Any mechanical work consumed by
the process should be added to Wn directly.
SINGLE-STAGE SEPARATION PROCESSES
Separation processes in which the energy consumption is critical are usually carried
out in multistage equipment, to reduce the amount of separating agent required. The
separating-agent requirement, in turn, is usually directly related to the energy
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 667
consumption. When the separation factor is quite large and when the equilibrium
behavior is unusual, the separation can be accomplished commercially in a single
stage. The following examples explore the energy requirements of three single-stage
processes for hydrogen purification. One of these processes is an equilibration
process with energy separating agent, another is an equilibration process with a mass
separating agent, and the third is a rate-governed separation process.
Example 13-1 A stream of 50 mol "â hydrogen and 50 mol "â methane at 3.45 MPa pressure and
294 K is to be separated continuously into two gaseous products at the same temperature or less and
at the same pressure as the feed. The hydrogen product should have a purity of at least 90 mol /â
and should contain at least 90",, of the hydrogen present in the feed, (a) Find the net work
consumption of a thermodynamically reversible process if heat sources and sinks are available at
294 K. (b) Find the net work consumption if the separation is to be accomplished by a continuous,
single-stage partial condensation using a single refrigerant. Use heat exchange where warranted. Also
obtain the thermodynamic efficiency.
SOLUTION (a) Assume the gas-phase activity coefficients to be unity. Since AH will be zero in the
absence of any heat of mixing, we can use Eq. (13-5) for Wmm Ti>. substituting RT0 for RT [see note
under Eq. (13-13)]:
+ (1 - XM) In _
XA1 â *A2 I I -XA1 1 â -XA1
.XAr 1 â .X.
â + (1 - .vA2 In
Since the minimum recovery fraction of hydrogen is 0.90, the maximum mole percent hydrogen in
the methane product for a 90 mol "â hydrogen product purity is 10 percent. Hence
[(o.40)(2X- 0.530 + 0.161)] = + 902 J/mol feed
(b) Binary equilibrium data are given in Fig. 2-23 (Prob. 2-D). Mollier diagrams for hydrogen
and methane are given in Figs. 13-3 and 13-4. The English engineering units used in these figures will
be converted into SI units as needed.-
A schematic of the single-stage partial condensation process is shown in Fig. 13-5. Refrigeration
is used to cool the feed mixture to the point where the desired degree of separation of hydrogen is
obtained between the gas and the liquid condensed out. The cold products are used to provide as
much of the feed cooling as possible.
At first glance it would seem that the products should be capable of providing all the cooling if
the outlet product streams can be brought up to feed temperature in the heat exchanger. This cannot
occur, of course, because the refrigerant duty represents the net work consumption of the process and
must be a positive quantity. The products cannot provide all the cooling because much of the heat
effect in the heat exchanger is latent heat rather than sensible heat. The latent heat of vaporization of
the methane is released at the boiling point of methane at 3.45 MPa, neglecting the effect of the
hydrogen remaining in the methane product. From Fig. 13-4, the boiling point of methane at
3.45 MPa is 181 K. Because of the presence of 50",, hydrogen in the feed, the dew point of the feed
will be substantially lower than 181 K. Thus the latent heat of vaporizing the methane product
cannot be used to consume the latent heat of condensing that product from the feed, and an
appreciable amount of refrigeration will be required.
Pressure psia
S99
S S IgggSS ? S 8
1
u
a
II
.3 00
"* 'C
1
I
.=
I
8,
0 =>
IS
OS c
â¢5 2
iI
fc. &
e a.
a. c
E3
SO
.S
^
a -8
669
1
11
It
-1 'C
K', â
2c
a-§
13
.
E
o
II
00 O
II
fG
l|
£ u.
670
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 671
Hydrogen product
Feed
Methane product
Figure 13-5 Separation of hydrogen and methane by partial condensation.
The equilibrium data must be used to determine the temperature to which the feed must be
cooled by the refrigerant. For any assumed temperature we can obtain values of K} from Fig. 2-23
and use Eqs. (2-12) and (2-14) to obtain x, and VIF for this binary system; >â¢, = K;.x;.
-150
172.2
9.0
0.92
t
t
t
1.000
-200
144.4
19
0.37
0.0338
0.642
0.769
0.984
-250
116.7
31
0.075
0.0300
0.93
0.522
0.971
t Above dew point.
The limitation comes from the purity of the hydrogen product, rather than from the necessary
recovery fraction of hydrogen. (From the description rule it should be noted that the conditions of
90 percent hydrogen purity and 90 percent recovery both cannot be imposed. The more stringent
of the two conditions sets the limit.) Interpolating, it will be necessary to cool to 119 K in order
to obtain a 90 percent hydrogen purity.
To find the refrigeration duty, we shall compare the enthalpy increase of the products in going
from 119 to 181 K. the methane remaining liquid, and the enthalpy decrease of the feed in going
from vapor at 181 K to a two-phase mixture at 119 K. We do this because the closest temperature
approach in the heat exchanger will come at 181 K, when the methane product has been raised to its
boiling point but has not yet vaporized. This assumes that at some internal location in the heat
exchanger the two streams have the same temperature, 181 K. It therefore postulates a heat exchan-
ger of infinite area. For convenience we shall treat the products as pure streams in order to determine
enthalpies.
Enthalpies of methane at 3.45 MPa
(Fig. 13-4)
Temp, K MJ/kg
Vapor
Liquid
Liquid
181
181
119
- 3.920
-4.167
-4.424
672 SEPARATION PROCESSES
If the enthalpy increase of hydrogen in going from 119 lo 181 K is AtfHj kJ/moL the cooling
available from raising the products to 181 K with the methane still liquid is
AHprod = (0.5)(0.016X-4.167 + 4.424) x 103 + 0.5 AtfH; = 2.06 + 0.5 AHHj kJ/mol feed
The cooling required to take the feed from vapor at 181 K to a two-phase mixture at 119 K is
AHf.«.j = (0.5)(0.016)(-4.424 + 3.920) x 103 - 0.5 AHH2 = -4.03 - 0.5 AHHj kJ/mol feed
The sum of these two quantitites AHprod + AW(ce<1 = - 1.97 kJ per mole of feed is equal to the
latent heat of condensation of the methane and represents the amount of refrigeration required in the
refrigeration exchanger. In this process the refrigeration must be delivered at 119 K or less, if we use
a single refrigerant.
If the refrigeration circuit is a reversible heat pump, the net work consumption corresponding
to the refrigeration duty is
(13-18)
T,«
Thus the work consumption for 1.97 kJ per mole of feed is given by
294 â 119
W, = 1.97 â = 2.90 kJ/mol feed
From Eq. (13-17) the thermodynamic efficiency is
= min. TO _ _ Q 31
W, 2900
In any real situation the refrigeration cycle will be irreversible, the refrigerant must be at some
temperature less than 119 K, and the products cannot be raised all the way to 181 K at the point in
the exchanger where the feed has been cooled to 181 K. If the thermodynamic efficiency of the
refrigeration cycle is 0.35, the overall efficiency of the process would be reduced to 0.35(0.31) = 0.11.
D
Often for a hydrogen purification process like that of Example 13-1 it is not
necessary for the methane (or other contaminant removed) to be kept at the same
high pressure as the feed. If the methane product can be reduced in pressure, cooling
can be obtained by passing the liquid methane through an adiabatic expansion
(Joule-Thomson) valve. This will take the methane to a lower temperature and will
reduce the temperature at which the methane vaporizes. As a result, the feed can be
cooled to a much lower temperature in the feed-products heat exchanger, and less
auxiliary refrigeration is required. If enough methane is in the feed, the need for
auxiliary refrigeration during steady-state operation may be eliminated.
The partial-condensation process described in Example 13-1 for separating
hydrogen and methane requires refrigeration at a very low level. Other approaches to
separation involve higher temperatures. Two such processes are considered in
Examples 13-2 and 13-3.
Example 13-2 Equilibrium data for methane dissolving in a paraffinic oil of molecular weight 220 at
31 + 2°C are shown in Fig. 13-6. Suppose that an oil of these characteristics is used lo separate
methane and hydrogen by single-stage absorption at 31°C. with absorbent regeneration carried out
by reducing the pressure. The feed conditions and product specifications are the same as in Example
13-1. (a) Devise a flowsheet for such a process. (/>) Find the net work consumption and thermodyna-
mic efficiency of the process, (c) By what amount could the net work consumption be reduced if the
absorption were carried out with multiple stages?
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 673
200
100
SO
J: | 20
II
5 10
0.1
0.5 1
Pressure, MPa
Figure 13-6 Equilibrium ratios for
methane in paraffinic oil of molecular
weight 220. (Data from Kirkbride and
Bertetti. 1943.)
SOLUTION (a) A flowsheet for the process is shown in Fig. 13-7. The feed is contacted with absorbent
oil in the absorber vessel. The gas leaving this vessel is the hydrogen product. The liquid leaving the
absorber is reduced in pressure through an expansion valve, and the gas which is formed is taken as
the methane product, which must be recompressed to feed pressure. The regenerated absorbent oil is
recirculated to the absorber. The process is presumed to be nearly isothermal at 31°C as a result of
the large absorbent circulation rate required.
(b) The absorber will operate at 3.45 MPa. the feed pressure, and must give a gaseous product
containing no more than 10 mol "â methane. From Fig. 13-6 the value of KCH4 at 3.45 MPa is 7.0;
hence we can compute .vCH4 'n tne oil leaving the absorber as
= >CH4 m 010 m
KCH. â¢
Because of the very low solubility of hydrogen in oils under these conditions, we can presume that
,XH) in the liquid leaving the absorber will be one or more orders of magnitude less and that the 90
percent recovery fraction of hydrogen specification is not a limit.
The regenerator must reduce the methane mole fraction in the absorbent to a value substan-
tially less than the mole fraction in the liquid leaving the absorber. The mole fraction of methane in
the methane product will be close to 1.00; hence, if .vr,,4 is to be reduced by half to 0.0071, we must
have
*â,_*». -.'*?-_ MO
*CH. 0.0071
From Fig. 13-6. this value of K occurs at 124 kPa. which we shall adopt as the regenerator pressure.
Note that the mole fraction of methane cannot be reduced by much more than a factor of 2 in
the regenerator without necessitating a vacuum system. It would be possible to regenerate the
absorbent at a higher pressure if some heat input (more net work) were introduced into the
regenerator.
674 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Hydrogen producl
t
Absorber
Feed-
Compressor
Recycle
absorbent
oil
Methane
product
Expansion
valve
Regenerator
Pump
Figure 13-7 Single-stage absorption process for separation of hydrogen and methane at ambient
temperature.
The absorbent rccirculation rate A can be obtained by a mass balance on the absorber, noting
that 0.45 mol of methane is to be removed per mole of feed:
(0.014.1 - 0.0071).4 = 0.45 and -1 = 62.5 mol mol feed
The energy consumption of (his process comes primarily from the work of recompressing the
methane product to 3.45 MPa and from the work of pumping the oil back up to 3.45 MPa. The work
of recompressing the methane can be obtained from Fig. 13-4. If a single isentropic compressor is
used, the enthalpy of the methane must increase from that at 124 kPa and 31°C to that at the same
entropy and 3.45 MPa. From the Mollier diagram we see that this compression would result in a
large enthalpy increase and would lead to a very high gas temperature, which would be off the chart.
It is common practice to carry out such compressions in stages, with intercooling between the stages,
to hold the gas temperature and work requirements down. We shall presume that the compression is
carried out in four stages, with intercooling to 37.8°C (100°F) between stages, and we shall neglect
mechanical inefficiencies. The overall compression ratio is 3.45 0.124 = 27.8; therefore we shall take
the compression ratio per stage to be (27.8)' 4 = 2.30. giving interstage pressures of 0.284. 0.65. and
1.50 MPa (41. 95. and 218 Ib in1 abs). The enthalpy increase in each stage is found from Fig 13-4:
AH.
Stage
Btu Ib CH4
1
-1454+ 1520 =
66
2
-1452 + 1515 =
63
3
-1454+ 1516 =
62
4
-1462 + 1518 =
56
247
The net work consumption for methane compression is
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 675
Hi -, = (247 *?) -^ ( .6 -L_) (0.5 "^ ( 1.055 ^) - 4.59 U/mo. feed
"â¢"""' I lb/454g\ molCH4/\ molfeedM Btu/
The density of a paraffinic oil with a molecular weight of 220 is about 750 kg/m3 (Perry and
Chilton, 1973). The minimum work requirement for the pump is V AP, where V is the volumetric
flow rate of absorbent oil. Hence
= («-5 -"^Ko^^) ~ (3450 - 124 kPa) = 61.1 kJ/mol feed
\ molfeed/\ mol oil/ 750 kg
Therefore W, = 4.59 + 61.1 = 65.7 kJ/mol feed
and the thermodynamic efficiency is
0.902
W, 65.7
(c) If the absorber is staged, it will no longer be necessary for the exit liquid from the absorber
to be in equilibrium with the exit gas. As long as the regenerated oil has been depleted in methane
sufficiently for there to be a positive driving force at the top of the absorber, the minimum absorbent
flow will correspond to equilibrium with the feed gas. If we again neglect temperature changes due to
the heat of absorption, this gives
_*«..,_ 0.50
~ ~Kâ ~ To^ ~~
in the rich absorbent.
The equilibrium xat4 at the top of the absorber will still be 0.0143; hence we shall still ask that
the regenerator operate at 124 kPa and reduce the actual xCHi to 0.0071. Thus W, comp will remain the
same as in part (b).
The advantage of staging lies in the reduction of the separating-agent (oil) requirement in the
absorber. By mass balance we have
0.45
0.0714 - 0.0071
Staging allows the oil to pick up as much as 10 times as much methane as in a single-stage
absorber. The pump work now becomes reasonable:
m (7.0)(0.220)(3.45-0.12)(1000) = ^ ^ ^
750
Hence W, = 4.59 + 6.84 = 11.43 kJ/mol feed
There is considerable advantage to staging the process. D
The relatively high absorbent circulation work found in Example 13-2 is the
result of the small solubility of methane in any solvent at ambient temperatures. An
approach often used for hydrogen-methane separation is absorption into a hydrocar-
bon solvent at subambient temperatures. Because of the presence of the absorbent
the temperatures required are not as low as those found for partial condensation in
Example 13-1, and because of the lower temperature the absorbent circulation re-
quirement is not as great as that found in Example 13-2. In addition, a lower-
676 SEPARATION PROCESSES
molecular-weight absorbent such as butane or hexane can be used; this will also
reduce the absorbent pumping power because a given number of moles will corre-
spond to less absorbent volume.
Example 13-3 Palladium metal has the unique property of allowing hydrogen to diffuse through it at
significant rates under conditions where other gases are not transmitted to any appreciable amount.
McBride and McKinley (1965) describe the operation of processes which use diffusion of hydrogen
through thin palladium barriers in order lo produce relatively pure hydrogen from streams contain-
ing mixtures of hydrogen and light hydrocarbons or hydrogen and carbon monoxide. A flow dia-
gram of such a process for separating hydrogen and methane is shown in Fig. 13-8.
In order to prevent loss of hydrogen transport rate caused by adsorption of methane on the
palladium surface, the diffuser must be operated at about 617 K. The feed is heated by the effluent
methane and hydrogen and by a furnace. The diffuser must present a large amount of palladium
barrier area in a compact volume: one design for accomplishing this would employ a number of
supported palladium tubes in parallel inside a shell. The product hydrogen must be recompressed.
McBride and McKinley (1965) report the following operating conditions for one plant:
Hydrogen content of feed = 53 mol "0 Feed pressure = 3.45 MPa
Product volume = 3.9 x 10* stdm3/day Hydrogen product purity = 99.2 mol "â
Find the net work consumption and thermodynamic efficiency for the hydrogen-methane
separation specified in Example 13-1 if the separation is carried out by the palladium diffusion
process of Fig. 13-8.
SOLUTION Apparently there will be no difficulty meeting the separation specifications with this
single-stage process. Although the recovery fraction of hydrogen for the preceding process is not
reported, it should certainly be possible to obtain a 90 percent recovery without reducing the
hydrogen purity below 90 percent.
It is necessary, however, that the product hydrogen pressure leaving the diffuser be less than the
hydrogen partial pressure in the methane product from the diffuser to assure a positive driving force
Methane product
Furnace
Feed
W;iler
Water
Supported palladium
lubes
7
Hydrogen product
Figure 13-8 Separation of hydrogen and methane by palladium diffusion.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 677
for mass transfer across the barrier. Since the hydrogen partial pressure in the methane product can
at most be 345 kPa, we shall take the pressure of the hydrogen leaving the diffuser to be 40 percent of
that value, or 138 kPa.
The work consumption of the hydrogen compressor can be determined by using the hydrogen
Mollier diagram in Fig. 13-3. The overall compression ratio is 3450/138 = 25, which we shall accom-
plish in four stages with intercooling to 38°C and individual compression rates of (25)' * = 2.24,
giving interstage pressures of 309, 690, and 1540 kPa (45. 100. and 224 lb/in2 abs):
AH.
Stage
Btu'lb H2
1
2400-
1885 =
515
2
2400-
1885 =
515
3
2400-
1885 =
515
4
2410-
1885 =
525
2070
2070 Btu
202
n.comp
lbH2
\ molHj / molfeed
= ^kj/molfeed
The furnace also involves net energy consumption. If the thermal driving force in the heat
exchanger is 40 K, the furnace will have to raise the feed from 577 to 617 K. With heat capacities
from Perry and Chilton (1973) we have
Qf = (0.5CPii + 0.5CP(HJ(40 K.) = [0.5(20.8) + 0.5(51.1)](40) = 1440 J/mol feed
The heat is to be supplied at an average temperature of 597 K. The equivalent work is
W,,ma = Qr -^-° = 1440 â = 690 J/mol feed
If.- J7 /
Hence W, = 4.86 + 0.69 = 5.55 kj/mol feed and r\ = - ' - = 0.16 D
The net work consumption of these processes should not be the sole basis for
comparison between them. For example, the palladium diffusion process requires
substantial amounts of palladium metal, which is very expensive; hence the palla-
dium process probably will require a greater initial capital investment than the other
processes. Feed impurities are important. Carbon dioxide, water, and hydrogen
sulfide all solidify in the cryogenic partial-condensation process and must be
removed from the feed before it is chilled. Sulfur poisons palladium, and hence sulfur
compounds must be removed from the feed to that process.
The choice between these processes is also influenced by the required product
pressures and product purities. If the methane product must be at feed pressure but
the hydrogen product can be at a lower pressure, the palladium process enjoys a
relative advantage since the hydrogen compressor work for that process can be
reduced or eliminated altogether. If the hydrogen is required at feed pressure but the
methane can be taken to a lower pressure, the more common situation, the condensa-
tion and absorption processes are favored relative to the palladium process. The
678 SEPARATION PROCESSES
condensation process has a particular advantage in this case since much of
the needed refrigeration can be obtained by expanding the liquid methane to a lower
pressure. The condensation process then works best when removing a relatively large
methane impurity since more methane refrigeration is available.
The palladium process gives very high product hydrogen purities and relatively
high hydrogen recoveries and has an advantage when ultrahigh purity is desired. The
cryogenic process, on the other hand, cannot easily provide hydrogen purities above
95 to 98 percent. Palazzo et al. (1957) describe a system for using absorption to
improve the hydrogen purity obtained from a cryogenic partial-condensation
process.
All three of the foregoing types of process are used commercially for separating
hydrogen and methane in various situations. Another process sometimes used is
heatless adsorption (Alexis. 1967; Stewart and Heck, 1969), in which methane is
removed from hydrogen through adsorption, with regeneration accomplished by
frequent lowerings of the pressure on the adsorbent beds. This process is most useful
when hydrogen recoveries of 80 to 85 percent, or less, are acceptable and when the
methane level in the feed is low.
MULTISTAGE SEPARATION PROCESSES
Benedict (1947) classified multistage separation processes into three categories, as
follows, on the basis of the relative energy consumption for a specified separation at a
given separation factor:
1. Potentially reversible processes. The net work consumption can, in principle, be reduced to
Wmin. TO ⢠This category generally includes those separation processes based upon equilibra-
tion of immiscible phases, which employ only energy as a separation agent. Examples are
distillation, crystallization, and partial condensation.
2. Partially reversible processes. Most steps are potentially reversible except for one or two.
e.g., the addition of solvent, which are inherently irreversible. These processes generally
include those equilibration separation processes which employ a stream of mass as a separ-
ating agent. Examples are absorption, extractive distillation, and chromatography.
3. Irreversible processes. All steps require irreversible energy input for operation. These
processes are generally rate-governed separation processes. Examples include membrane
separation processes, gaseous diffusion, and electrophoresis.
The energy consumption of processes in each of these categories is explored in
the ensuing discussion. It will be shown that for cases where y. is near unity:
1. The potentially reversible or energy-separating-agent processes have a net work consump-
tion which is, to the first approximation, independent of separation factor a. and an energy
throughput inversely proportional to a â 1.
2. The partially reversible or mass-separating-agent processes have a net work consumption
varying, to the first approximation, inversely as y. - 1.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 679
F. XF. 7>
d,Xt
Figure 13-9 Distillation of a close-boiling mixture.
3. The irreversible or rate-governed processes have a net work consumption varying, to a first
approximation, inversely as (a â I)2.
We shall also find that the energy consumption for a given separation with a separa-
tion factor that is the same for all processes tends to increase in the ascending order
of potentially reversible process < partially reversible process < rate-governed
process, as long as the separation factor is in the range 0.1 to 10 and the separation
requires staging.
Potentially Reversible Processes: Close-boiling Distillation
As an example of a potentially reversible process we consider the distillation of a
close-boiling binary mixture, e.g., propylene-propane. The process and notation are
shown in Fig. 13-9. The feed rate is F; the feed contains a mole fraction .xf of the
more volatile component; the distillate rate and mole fraction are d and xd; the
bottoms rate and mole fraction are b and xb. For convenience, we shall postulate that
the liquid flow in the rectifying section is constant from plate to plate and equal to L;
this is usually a good assumption for a close-boiling mixture. The latent heat of both
species is /, and latent-heat effects outweigh sensible-heat effects. The feed enthalpy
and temperature TF are chosen so that QR = Qc. This will correspond closely to
saturated liquid feed. The condenser and reboiler areas are assumed to be so large
that QR is put in at TK, the bubble-point temperature of the bottoms, and Qc is
removed at Tc, the bubble point of the distillate. Pressure drop through the tower is
ignored.
680 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Under these conditions the net work consumption of the distillation is given by
Eq. (13-15) ast
(13-19)
To find Qc, we consider the case of minimum reflux. From Eq. (9-7) we have
Lmin = [(.xV.vf)-a(l-xd)/(l-.x^
0£ â 1
As noted in Chap. 9, the minimum reflux does not continue increasing as the pro-
ducts become highly pure but instead reaches an asymptotic value, given by
Eq. (9-9), for all cases of relatively pure distillate:
In Eq. (13-19) Qc is then given by Qc = A(Z^in + d). For close-boiling mixtures Z^,in
will be much larger than d, and Eq. (9-9) leads to
Qc-^F (13-21)
The difference of reciprocal temperatures in Eq. (13-19) can also be estimated in
terms of a and A. The Clausius-Clapeyron equation gives
d In P° A
d(\/T) R
(13-22)
where P° is vapor pressure. The overhead temperature Tc for a relatively complete
separation corresponds closely to the boiling point of the more volatile component at
the column pressure. Similarly, TR corresponds closely to the boiling point of the less
volatile component at the column pressure. The vapor pressure of the more volatile
component at the bottoms temperature will then be a times the column pressure.
Hence we can integrate Eq. (13-22) for the more volatile component between the
overhead and bottoms temperature to obtain
,13-23,
Substituting Eqs. (13-21) and (13-23) into Eq. (13-19) and making use of the fact that
In a * a â 1 for a close-boiling mixture by a Taylor-series expansion, we have
W'n = RFT0 (13-24)
This result shows that W'n tends to be independent of a for the distillation of
close-boiling mixtures. The lack of dependence of W'n on a is typical of the category of
t Equation (13-15) was developed for the net work consumption per mole of feed Wn. For a
continuous-flow process with a given feed rate F we are interested in the net work consumption per unit
time W".; W, is related to W'n through Wn = Wn F.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 681
potentially reversible processes, as mentioned previously. In a distillation this beha-
vior is a consequence of two factors which offset each other: (1) as a becomes closer
to unity, a higher reflux is required and hence the energy flow through the column, as
represented by Qc and QR , increases; (2) as a becomes closer to unity, the difference
between 7^ and Tc becomes less and the energy passing through the column is
degraded to a lesser extent. Consequently the net work consumption, to a first
approximation, is independent of a.
This conclusion was derived for minimum reflux but is also true for any actual
operating reflux ratio as long as the products are relatively pure. For a reflux ratio
above the minimum, readers should convince themselves that Eq. (13-24) would
become
(13-25)
For the separation of a nearly ideal close-boiling mixture A// for the process
streams entering and leaving is very nearly equal to zero. Hence, by Eqs. (13-3) and
(13-1)
ABSCP * - RT0[xF In .VF + (1 - XF ) In (1 - .XF)] (13-26)
From Eqs. (13-11) and (13-17) the thermodynamic efficiency r\ of the separation
process is
For close-boiling distillation ABscp is given by Eq. (13-26) and W'n by Eq. (13-24) or
(13-25).
Figure 13-10 shows the thermodynamic efficiency of a close-boiling distillation
of an ideal mixture giving relatively pure products when carried out at minimum
reflux. Also included for comparison are results given by Robinson and Gilliland
(1950) for a benzene-toluene distillation and an ethanol-water distillation, both
carried out at atmospheric pressure. A complete separation was postulated in the
benzene-toluene case. The ethanol-water distillation was taken to give 87 mol °n and
0°-0 alcohol in the distillate and bottoms, respectively. Actual equilibrium and
enthalpy data were used for these two cases. Note that nonideality does not neces-
sarily imply a lower thermodynamic efficiency.
One factor neglected in this analysis is the pressure drop through the tower. For
extremely close-boiling distillations, such as propylene-propane, the pressure drop
may have as much or more effect on the difference between TR and Tc as the composi-
tion change; however, in principle the pressure drop can be reduced through altered
tray design, more open packings, and/or increased tower diameter. For an economic
optimum design, though, the pressure drop can still be important. In such cases, a
term in (a â 1)~2 is added to Eqs. (13-24) and (13-25), since the additional difference
in 1/T is proportional to the pressure drop, the pressure drop is proportional to the
number of stages N, N is approximately proportional to Afmin , and Nmin , by the
Fenske equation (9-24), is proportional to (In a)'1 [or to (a- 1)~' for a close-
boiling distillation].
682 SEPARATION PROCESSES
1-01â
Close-boiling ideal mixture
Benzene-loluene
Ethanol-water
0 0.5 1.0
More volatile component in feed, mole fraction
Figure 13-10 Thermodynamic efficiency of distillation of various mixtures at minimum reflux. (Daw Irom
Robinson and Gilliland. 1950.)
Also neglected in this analysis were the additional temperature drops for heat
transfer across the reboiler and the condenser. Most distillation designs use a rela-
tively large temperature drop across the reboiler and/or the condenser, and the
resultant increase in A( 1/T) can be substantial and sometimes dominant. For distilla-
tions using a steam source at fixed pressure to heat the reboiler and cooling water for
the condenser, W'n becomes directly proportional to Qc and hence to (a â 1)~ ', since
the term in parentheses in Eq. (13-19) is then independent of a.
The additional components in a multicomponent distillation serve to increase
W'n in two ways. The temperature span across the column is greater than for the
equivalent binary distillation of the keys alone; thus A(1/T) is greater. Also, the
nonkeys increase the minimum reflux ratio and hence Qc.
Fonyo (1974/>) has analyzed the relative contributions of irreversibilities within
the column, temperature drops across reboiler and condenser, and pressure drop to
the energy requirements of a distillation separating ethylene from ethane, propane,
and butane.
Partially Reversible Processes: Fractional Absorption
The contrast between the energy requirements of a potentially reversible (energy-
separating agent) process and those of a partially reversible (mass-separating-agent)
process can perhaps best be appreciated by replacing the overhead condenser and
reflux system of a distillation tower with an entering stream of heavy absorbent
liquid. In this case we have the absorber-stripper process shown in Fig. 13-11. The
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 683
Water
⢠Product
Feed
/N
Product
Steam
Water
Stripping gas
Figure 13-11 Absorber-stripper column (left),
with regeneration by distillation (right).
gaseous feed mixture to be separated enters midway along the column on the left.
The upper portion of the column acts as an ordinary absorber, with absorbing liquid
flowing downward countercurrent to the rising gas. The liquid leaving the bottom of
the column is regenerated in the distillation column on the right. The regenerated
heavy liquid is then recirculated to the top of the column. Some of the separated gas
is used as a stripping medium providing vapor counterflow in the column, and the
rest of the separated gas is taken as product. Both absorption and stripping sections
are used to fractionate effectively between two components with significant solubili-
ties (see discussion surrounding Fig. 4-24).
The analysis of the main absorber-stripper tower is similar to the analysis of a
distillation tower. We shall presume that the feed contains two soluble components,
A and B. The lighter component A appears primarily in the overhead product from
the absorber. Component B appears primarily in the other product. The separation
can be analyzed as an equivalent binary distillation of A and B provided we define
the equivalent liquid flow L in this distillation as the total moles of dissolved
(solvent-free) gases.
The feed gas enters the upflowing gas stream at the feed stage but has little effect
on the moles of dissolved gas to be found in the downflowing liquid. Hence we have
the equivalent of a saturated vapor feed to a binary distillation column. For relatively
pure products, the overhead product gas flow rate will be yA.F^. and a rearrange-
ment of Eq. (9-10) gives
.v
â '
<*AB â
(13-28)
684 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Again, L is the total moles of dissolved gases, not the total liquid flow. If the number
of moles of heavy liquid required to dissolve 1 mol of gas at the feed stage is y.\ . the
minimum absorbent liquid flow is
[aAB(l - yA. f ) + >'A. F]F (13-29)
.mn
aAB ~
The work requirement of this absorption process comes in the separation of the
dissolved gas from the liquid leaving the bottom of the column. The number of moles
of liquid plus dissolved gas leaving the bottom of the column under conditions of
minimum absorbent flow and relatively pure products is Amln + (1 - y\,F)F. Fora
difficult separation where aAB is close to unity, the term in the brackets in Eq. (13-29)
approaches 1, and Amin is much greater than (1 - >>A,F)F. The molar feed rate to the
regeneration distillation column FD then becomes
(13-30)
SAB - 1
FD is substantially greater than F, which would have been the feed rate to the
distillation if it had been used directly to separate the mixture of A and B. There are
two reasons for this: (1) /A is typically greater than 1, so as to provide sufficient
absorption medium for the solute gases: (2) as aAB -» 1, the quantity (oc^ â I)"1
becomes much greater than 1. Even in the case where the mole fraction of dissolved
gases is substantial in the rich liquid from the absorber, a term involving (aAB - 1 )~ '
must be a major contributor to the feed to the regenerator.
Because of the factor (aAB - 1)~ ' in Eq. (13-30), the energy throughput and net
work consumption for this absorption process must vary with a more negative power
of aAB â 1 than for a simple distillation process separating the same mixture. If
the distillative regeneration for the absorption process operates at minimum reflux
and follows Eq. (13-24), the net work consumption for the absorption process
becomes
(13-31)
m
«AB -
The behavior shown for this absorption process is characteristic of that for
mass-separating-agent processes where the absorbent or solvent is regenerated by
distillation or by any other, similar process. The additional factor of (aAB â I)"1
stems from the fact that the necessary flow of mass separating agent varies with
(BAB - 1) ' [Eq- (13-29)], and the mass separating agent must then be regenerated.
e.g., by distillation. In the mass-separating-agent process there is no simple way in
which the greater throughput of separating agent as aAB -> 1 can be compensated by
less degradation in energy level, as is true for straight distillation.
Irreversible Processes: Membrane Separations
Rate-governed processes are characterized by the necessity of adding separating
agent irreversibly to each stage. An example is the multistage membrane process
shown in Fig. 13-12. In this process the pressure difference required to drive the
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 685
Product â¢
Feedâ»0~
Pump(
Membrane
âf 1 JT Permeate
Retentate
Product -»-
Figure 13-12 Multistage membrane separation process.
permeate through the membrane must be resupplied to each permeate stream before
it enters the next stage. The pumping work required to increase the pressures of these
streams is the primary energy input to the process.
If the flow of permeate (moles per hour) through the membrane within a given
stage is denoted as Vp (by analogy to the vapor streams in distillation), the required
pressure drop across the membrane will be given by Eq. (1-22) as
⢠â P
+ ATI
(13-32)
where kw is the membrane permeability, in moles per unit time and per unit mem-
brane area and per unit pressure drop, and Ap is the membrane area in stage p. The
expression VP/AP is the same as Nw in Eq. (1-22). The term Arc represents the differ-
ence in osmotic pressure across the membrane, occasioned by the difference in com-
position between the upstream and downstream sides, and corresponds to the
minimum thermodynamic work requirement for the separation of that stage if there
is infinite membrane area. For most real devices the first term on the right-hand side
of Eq. (13-32) substantially outweighs the second term, in order to give sufficient
permeation rate.
Assuming that the membrane pressure drop and the molar density of the per-
686 SEPARATION PROCESSES
meate pM are the same for each stage and that the ATI term is negligible in Eq. (13-32),
we have
W. = â IK, (13-33)
PM f=\
The work requirement is thus proportional to both the permeate flow per stage and
the number of stages. For a relatively complete separation the minimum permeate
flow at the feed stage is given by Eq. (9-10) as
^.min -- â -F (13-34)
The permeate flow required in each stage will be proportional to this ^.min, but
because of the need for separating-agent introduction to each stage Vf can readily
change from stage to stage.
The minimum stage requirement for a given degree of separation is given by the
Fenske-Underwood equation as
_ AB ,1335)
In aAB
For aAB close to 1, In aAB can be replaced by aAB â 1, and Nmin is proportional to
(OCAB â 1)~ '. Therefore, for aAB close to 1, a combination of Eqs. (13-33) to (13-35)
gives
¥.%*. to V£ (13-36)
l)2PMNmin (/B)d
where we presume that NKl /Nmin is a factor which is independent of a and that the
permeate flow in each stage will be equal to V/.,min.
Several unique features of this category of rate-governed separation processes
should be pointed out. First it should be noted that the net work consumption for
potentially and partially reversible processes involved only thermodynamic variables
such as R, T0, and a. Equation (13-36) and any similar expression for any other
rate-governed separation process involves a rate-constant characteristic of the device
performing the separation. For the membrane process this rate constant is kw , which
enters as V^Aft^P. Second, the rate-governed processes are more flexible than
other types of processes with respect to the size of the interstage flows. Since separat-
ing agent must be introduced to each stage, it is readily possible to adjust the
interstage flows at different interstage locations independently of each other. This is
not such a simple matter with the potentially reversible and partially reversible
processes. We shall see later that this flexibility usually leads to the use of smaller
interstage flows at the product ends of the cascade for rate-governed processes
compared with the feed stage. Even with this type of design, however, the interstage
flows at all points will be proportional to that required at the feed stage, and W'n will
still vary as (a â 1)~2 for a near 1.
Since multistage membrane processes require a net energy consumption which
increases as (a â 1)~2 as a -» 1, they are usually not preferred for such separations.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 687
Membrane separation processes find their greatest application when they provide a
large separation factor and, as a result, one stage or very few stages at most will
accomplish the separation.
In some cases, notably isotope separation processes, the rate-governed separa-
tion processes are the only processes which provide a separation factor of any
appreciable size. An example is the separation of uranium isotopes, where gaseous
diffusion provides a separation factor of 1.0043. Although this separation factor gives
a seemingly low value of a â 1, it is still orders of magnitude greater than the value of
a â 1 attainable with potentially reversible and partially reversible processes. Hence
gaseous diffusion was selected in the World War II Manhattan Project as the large-
scale process for separating uranium isotopes, even though 345 stages were required,
as a minimum, with compressor power input necessary for each stage (Benedict,
1947; Benedict and Pigford, 1957).
REDUCTION OF ENERGY CONSUMPTION
Energy Cost vs. Equipment Cost
With high costs of energy it is advantageous to look for ways of reducing the energy
consumption of a process. Reducing energy consumption often involves using addi-
tional equipment; a classical example is reducing energy consumption by adding
more effects in multieffect evaporation (Appendix B). An economic optimization
balancing energy and equipment costs to achieve the lowest cost is then appropriate
(Appendix D). During the 1970s the cost of energy rose dramatically, and although
the cost of equipment increased also, it increased less. Under these circumstances it is
appropriate to seek methods of reducing energy consumption as a likely avenue back
to the economic optimum. The relative incentives along these lines in future years
will depend upon the relative scarcity and consequent cost increases of energy and of
material resources.
General Rules of Thumb
Table 13-1 presents a number of rules of thumb to help reduce the energy require-
ments of separation processes. Many of them are rooted in the preceding discussion
of factors controlling energy consumption in separations.
Mechanical separations (filtration, centrifugation, etc.) generally require much
less energy than separation processes for homogeneous mixtures. Hence it is often
advantageous to perform a mechanical separation first (rule 1) if part of the separa-
tion can be accomplished in that way.
Heat losses can be controlled through insulation (rule 2). The value of insulation
increases with increasing departures from ambient temperature and with increasing
surface-to-volume ratio of equipment. The percentage heat loss from a large distilla-
tion column is usually quite small, but insulation may still be used in order to reduce
process upsets in response to changes in ambient conditions, e.g., rainstorms. Many
drying processes involve release of hot effluent air to the atmosphere; there is incen-
688 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Table 13-1 Approaches to decreased energy consumption in separations
No. Ruk
1 Perform mechanical separations first if more than one phase is present in feed mixture.
2 Avoid losses of heat. cold, or mechanical work; insulate where appropriate; avoid large hot
or cold discharges of products, mass separating agent, etc.
5 Avoid overdesign and/or operating practices which unnecessarily lead to overseparation;
for variable plant capacity, seek designs which allow efficient turndown.
4 Seek efficient control schemes which minimize excess energy consumption during transients
and which reduce process disturbances due to interactions resulting from energy
integration.
5 Look for those constituents of a process which have the largest changes in available energy
(or largest costs) as prime candidates for reducing energy consumption through process
modification.
6 Favor separation processes transferring the minor, rather than the major, component(s)
between phases.
7 Use heat exchange where appropriate; where heat exchange is expensive, seek higher heat-
transfer coefficients.
8 Endeavor to reduce flows of mass separating agents; favor agents giving high K}. as long as
selectivity can be achieved.
9 Favor high separation factors as long as they are useful.
10 Avoid designs which mix streams of dissimilar composition and/or temperature.
11 Recognize value differences of energy in different forms and of heat and cold at different
temperature levels: add and withdraw heat at a temperature level close to that at which it
is required or available; endeavor to use the full temperature difference between heat
source and heat sink efficiently, e.g., multieffect evaporation.
12 For separations driven by heat throughput over relatively small temperature differences,
investigate possible use of mechanical work in a heat pump.
13 Use staging or countercurrent flow where appropriate to reduce separating-agent
consumption.
14 For cases of similar separation factors, favor energy-separaling-agent processes over mass-
separating-agenl processes, and. if staging is necessary, favor equilibration processes over
rate-governed processes.
15 Among energy-separating-agent processes, favor those with lower latent heat of phase
change.
16 When pressure drop is an important contributor to energy consumption, seek efficient
equipment internals which reduce pressure drop.
live in these cases for using recycle and indirect heating of the air or other drying
medium or using higher-temperature inlet air.
Often separation processes for which the feed or other process conditions have
changed separate the products to a greater extent than necessary (rule 3). In a
distillation column gains can frequently be made simply by reducing the boil-up and
reflux ratio. Limited turndown capabilities of equipment lead to excessive energy
consumption at reduced capacity. For example, excess vapor boil-up may be needed
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 689
in a distillation to keep the trays within the region of efficient operation (see
Fig. 12-9).
Process-control schemes play a central role in process energy consumption (rule
4). Often transient operation, including start-up and shutdown, leads to a much
higher energy consumption per unit of throughput which could be avoided with an
improved control scheme. Many methods for reducing energy consumption (such as
heat exchange) lead to increased dynamic interactions within a process. Use of these
methods is often held back by worries about reliable process control.
Available energy [B, Eq. (13-10)] is a state function, and, taken together for all
components of a process, the change in available energy of process streams deter-
mines the net work consumption of the process. The greatest gains in reducing
energy requirements can potentially be made by modification of those steps which
involve the greatest loss of available energy (rule 5). A similar approach for overall
cost reduction involves looking for modifications of the most expensive component
of a process. King et al. (1972) explored systematic logic by which these concepts
could be applied to evolutionary improvement of the designs of a demethanizer
distillation column and a methane-liquefaction process.
The energy consumption of a separation process is often directly related to the
amount of material which must change phase. Particularly when a dilute solution is
to be separated, it is often effective to choose a process which will transfer the
low-concentration component(s) between phases rather than the high-concentration
component (rule 6). For example, ion exchange enjoys an energy advantage over
evaporation for desalting slightly brackish water.
Heat exchange is a very direct form of energy conservation and should be con-
sidered where possible (rule 7), e.g., between products and the feed to a separation
process at nonambient temperature, or to make the condenser of one distillation
column serve as the reboiler for another. Also, whenever heat exchange is quite
expensive but would be effective for conserving energy, there is considerable incen-
tive for developing exchangers with high heat-transfer coefficients. Many of the
advances in evaporative desalting of seawater have come about in that way.
Mass separating agents usually require regeneration, and the cost and energy
consumption of that regeneration are directly proportional to the amount of agent
used. Agents providing higher equilibrium distribution coefficients require lower
circulation rates (rule 8).
High separation factors are useful in reducing the need for staging and in reduc-
ing the separating-agent requirement in a staged process (rule 9). Once a separation
is achievable in a single stage, increased separation factor is of no further value unless
it allows the flow of separating agent to be reduced.
Mixing dissimilar streams is a source of irreversibility and thereby tends to
increase energy consumption (rule 10). Recycle streams should be introduced at the
point where they are most similar to the prevailing process stream. Large driving
forces for direct-contact heat-transfer, mass-transfer, and chemical-reaction steps
should be avoided.
Because of Carnot inefficiencies electric energy and mechanical work have higher
values per unit of energy than heat and refrigeration energy. The value of a particular
form of energy also relates to the opportunity for using it in that form. The value of
690 SEPARATION PROCESSES
heat or refrigeration energy is greater the farther removed in temperature it is from
ambient (the availability concept). Hence it is desirable to add heat from a source at a
temperature not far above that at which the heat is needed and to use withdrawn heat
at a temperature not much below the temperature at which it is withdrawn (rule 11).
When a particular heat source and heat sink are most convenient, it is desirable to
use the temperature difference between them as fully as possible. The multieffect
principle accomplishes this for evaporation and is applicable to any vapor-liquid
separation process. The forward-feed multieffect evaporation process for seawater
discussed in Appendix B (Fig. B-2) is a good example of a design using heat effec-
tively at its own level.
Energy-separating-agent processes which do not involve too large a temperature
span between heat source and heat sink can also be operated through a heat-pump
principle, in which mechanical work is used, as in a refrigeration cycle, to withdraw
heat at a low temperature and supply it at a higher temperature (rule 12). There are
several approaches for doing this, developed later for distillation. Vapor-
recompression evaporators (see, for example, Casten, 1978; Bennett. 1978) are effective
for using mechanical work when the boiling-point elevation in the evaporation is not
too large.
Staging is effective for reducing the consumption of separating agent (rule 13), as
well as increasing product purities.
Energy-separating-agent processes have two energy-related advantages over
mass-separating-agent processes (rule 14): mass-separating-agent processes are only
partially reversible, in the categories of Benedict (1947), and hence require more
energy in a close separation than a potentially reversible process. Also, an energy
separating agent can readily be removed and exchanged with another stream, but
such an operation with a mass separating agent requires an additional separation.
Rate-governed separations are irreversible by Benedict's classification and hence
require even greater energy consumption for a close separation with a given separa-
tion factor.
Among energy-separating-agent processes, the energy throughput required for a
given separation factor is directly proportional to the latent heat of phase change;
this favors processes with low latent heats (rule 15). This incentive is reduced some-
what by the ease of building energy-separating-agent processes in multieffect
configurations.
Finally, when the pressure drop within the separator is an important contributor
to the overall energy requirement, there is an incentive to utilize internals which
inherently give low pressure drop (rule 16).
Examples Two examples will illustrate how these guidelines can be used. The first
involves a process reported by Bryan (1977) for dehydration of waste citrus peels to
make them suitable for cattle feed (see Fig. 13-13). The energy consumption would
be quite large (the latent heat of vaporization of all the water) if the dewatering were
accomplished entirely in a dryer. Several energy economies are represented in the
process shown in Fig. 13-13:
1. A mechanical separation (pressing) is used to remove much of the peel liquor before the
peel is put into the dryer (rule 1).
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 691
Evaporators Water
Water
Concentrated
peel liquor
(molasses)
Hot gases
Recycle gases
Figure 13-13 Process for conversion of citrus peel into cattle feed, using dehydration.
2. The peel liquor is concentrated separately in a multieffect evaporator (rule 11). No similar
energy savings could be gained with common dryer designs. The concentrated peel liquor is
returned to the feed before the press, so that the liquor remaining in the pressed peels will be
as concentrated as possible. This lessens the load on the dryer, shifting it to the more
energy-efficient evaporators.
3. The dryer is run with recirculation of the hot-air heating medium. This makes it possible to
develop a high enough water-vapor content in the exhaust air from the dryer for this
air stream to be used to drive the multieffect evaporator instead of being discharged (rule 2).
The presence of inert gases in the moist air stream probably reduces the heat-transfer
coefficient in the first effect of the evaporator, however.
The second example is removal and recovery of citrus oil from the water effluent
from a citrus-processing plant. The principal constituents of this water are terpenes,
and their concentration (about 0.1 percent) considerably exceeds their solubility
(about 15 ppm); hence they are predominantly emulsified. Candidate separation
processes for recovering the oil are stripping, extraction, adsorption, freeze-
concentration, and reverse osmosis. Relative to the other processes, freeze-
concentration and reverse osmosis have the disadvantage that the major component
(water) must change phases (rule 6). This disadvantage is less important for reverse
osmosis since it can operate in one stage and involves no latent heat of phase change
(rule 15). Stripping, extraction, and adsorption are all mass-separating-agent
processes which require that the separating agent be regenerated. Hence there is a
considerable incentive to find separating agents which provide a high equilibrium
distribution coefficient for the oil (rule 8). There is an interesting contrast between
extraction and adsorption if the waste water contains only dissolved oil. If the
partition coefficient is independent of oil concentration, the solvent-to-water ratio
required in the extraction will be independent of concentration and the energy
692 SEPARATION PROCESSES
required for solvent regeneration will not change significantly. On the other hand, in
a fixed-bed adsorption process the frequency of regeneration and resultant energy
consumption are directly proportional to the oil concentration. Therefore, from an
energy viewpoint, extraction is favored for higher oil concentrations and adsorption
for lower concentrations. Finally, the energy consumption for stripping and adsorp-
tion could be considerably reduced if a preliminary mechanical separation were
made to remove suspended oil, e.g., by centrifugation or flotation (rule 1).
Distillation
Distillation is by far the most common separation technique used in the petroleum,
natural-gas, and chemical industries. In an audit of distillation energy consumptions
for the production of various large-volume chemicals. Mix et al. (1978) concluded
that distillation consumes about 3 percent of the United States energy. A 10 percent
savings in distillation energy would amount to a savings of about S500 million in the
national energy cost. There is clearly a substantial incentive for developing and
implementing ways of lessening the energy consumption of distillation.
Some of the more obvious approaches are direct extensions of several of the
principles listed in Table 13-1, e.g., reducing reflux to the smallest necessary level
insulation, feed-product heat exchange, and energy-efficient control. Often a change
in feed location will be effective in reducing reflux requirements for an older column.
Mix et al. (1978) discuss in some detail the potential advantages of tray retrofit, i.e.,
substituting trays that are more efficient; they also identify industrial distillations for
which tray retrofit should be most attractive. There are also rather direct ways to
make use of reject heat at its own level, e.g., by making steam with pumparound
loops in crude-oil distillation and using two-stage condensation for a wide-boiling
column overhead (Bannon and Marple, 1978). Two-stage condensation can serve to
preheat a stream or make steam in the first, hotter stage and then achieve the desired
final level of cooling in the second stage.
Other approaches that can be effective for distillation involve improving the
efficiency of using available heat sources and sinks (rule 11) and the reduction of
irreversibility in the design of the distillation itself. We shall consider both these areas
in more detail.
Heat Economy Cascaded columns For the atmospheric-pressure benzene-toluene
distillation analyzed by Robinson and Gilliland (1950) and considered in Fig. 13-10,
the condensation temperature of the benzene overhead is 80°C and the boiling
temperature of the toluene bottoms is 111°C. In any practical situation cooling water
would most likely be used to condense the overhead, and steam at some pressure
above atmospheric would be used to reboil the bottoms. If the cooling water were
available at 27°C and the steam were at 121 °C, the temperature difference between
heating medium and coolant would be 94CC, whereas a temperature drop of only
31°C is required by the distillation itself. The heat passing through the column would
be degraded through a greater temperature range, and the term \/Tc â \/TR in
Eq. (13-23) would increase from 1/353 - 1/384 = 2.29 x 10~4 K'1 to 1/300-
1/394 = 7.95 x 10~4K~1. or by a factor of 3.5. Hence the net work consumption is
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 693
raised by a factor of 3.5 over that given by Eq. (13-24), and the thermodynamic
efficiencies for benzene-toluene in Fig. 13-10 would be decreased by a factor of 3.5.
Despite the greater degradation of energy one would still probably use steam
and cooling water because they are the cheapest utilities available for the purpose in
the plant. However, a multieffect or cascaded-column design can be considered for
greater energy economy at the expense of added investment. Use of the multieffect
principle is possible whenever the temperature difference between the heat source
and heat sink required to drive a separation process is substantially less than the
actual temperature difference between the available heat source and the available
heat sink. In the case of evaporation the necessary difference in temperature between
the heat source and heat sink equals the boiling-point elevation due to nonvolatile
solute in solution, but the available temperature difference is typically that between
steam and cooling water, which is much greater.
Figure 13-14a to c illustrates three ways in which the multieffect principle can be
used to make the energy supply and removal to and from a distillation process more
efficient (Robinson and Gilliland, 1950). In all three cases there are two distillation
columns, the reboiler of one and the condenser of the other being combined into a
single heat exchanger. The lower column in each case is operated at a higher pressure
than the upper column. The pressures are chosen so that the condensation tempera-
ture of the overhead stream from the lower column is greater than the boiling
temperature of the bottoms stream of the upper column. In this way the vapor
generated in the reboiler of the lower column is used throughout both columns.
In Fig. 13-14a the upper and lower columns perform identical functions, both
separating the same feed into relatively pure products. The only difference lies in the
pressures of the columns. Thus in the situation of Fig. 13-14a we are able to process
twice as much feed with a given amount of heat input to the process, but that heat
energy is degraded over twice as great a temperature range as is needed for a single
column. The net work consumption within the distillation column per mole of feed is
the same (half as much energy, twice as much degradation), but the process of
Fig. 13-14a is able to utilize a large temperature differential between heat source and
heat sink more efficiently.
In the process of Fig. 13-14/5, the lower column receives the entire feed and
separates it into a relatively pure bottoms product and an overhead product some-
what enriched in the more volatile component. The upper column then takes this
enriched feed and separates it into two relatively pure products. In this situation the
heat energy need not be degraded to the same extent required in Fig. 13-14asince the
temperature drop across the lower column is not as great. On the other hand, it is no
longer possible to process twice as much feed per unit heat input. The heat energy is
used twice throughout the full stripping sections of the columns, but the final
purification of the distillate is accomplished using the vapor only once. Such an
arrangement has some good potential features with regard to irreversibilities inside
the columns, however, as will be shown subsequently.
One can also picture an operation which is the inverse of that shown in
Fig. 13-14/7. The lower column could manufacture a relatively pure distillate and a
bottoms somewhat depleted in the more volatile component. This bottoms would
then be fed to the upper column where it would be separated into relatively pure
694 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Feed
(a) W (<â¢)
Figure 13-14 Multieffect distillation columns: (a) individual feeds; ('>) forward feed of one product: (c)
forward feed of two products.
products. In such a case, the portion of the distillation closest to the bottoms compo-
sition would be accomplished with smaller total interstage flows than the rest of the
distillation.
Figure 13-14c shows a situation where the lower column makes two products
which are only somewhat enriched in the components and where both products from
the lower column are fed to appropriate points in the upper column, which manufac-
tures relatively pure products. In this scheme the temperature range of the lower
column is even less and the required degree of heat energy degradation is even less
than for the other schemes. The generated vapor is used twice for those portions of
the distillation with compositions just above and below that of the feed and is used
only once for compositions nearer to the product composition.
One problem with cascading columns by linking the reboiler of one with the
condenser of another is that dynamic process upsets propagate back and forth be-
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 695
tween the columns and the control task becomes more difficult. Tyreus and Luyben
(1976) discuss the advantages and disadvantages of different control schemes for such
systems.
Tyreus and Luyben (1975) present a case study of cascaded-column designs for
propylene-propane distillation and for methanol-water distillation, both using steam
and cooling water.
It is also possible to combine the reboiler of one column with the condenser of
another for towers distilling entirely different mixtures, but it must be recognized that
in such cases transient disturbances may recycle over much larger portions of the
entire process.
In some cases it is possible to derive some or all of the reboiler duty of a column
from the heat content of the feed mixture if the feed is available as a vapor at a
pressure considerably above that of the column. Figure 13-15 shows a design where a
feed gas at high pressure loses sensible heat and condenses partially to supply re-
boiler heat before being reduced to column pressure.
Heat pumps For close-boiling distillations, rule 12 leads to consideration of heat-
pump designs (Null, 1976), three of which are shown in Fig. 13-16. In all three cases
Column at lower
pressure than
feed
Distillate
(gas, high pressure)
Bottoms
Figure 13-15 Use of high-pressure feed as
a reboiling medium.
696 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Condenser
Vapor
1
Feed
r\
Distillate 1
Ir!
I Compressor I
Dp
t
Feed
Liquid
i Vapor
w
Q-TJ Compressor
t
w
Reboiler
L-0â~&âJ
/ Trim cooling
Bottoms
(a)
Reboiler and
condenser
(b)
Reboiler
and condenser
(P) Trim cooling
* â
7f
Bottoms ' »
Distillate
r\
Feed
CZ3
Distillate
Trim cooling
&
DO Compressor
X
W
Bottoms
(<)
Figure 13-16 Heat-pump schemes for distillation: (a) external working fluid; (b) overhead vapor recom-
pression; (c) reboiler liquid flashing.
compression work is used to overcome the adverse temperature difference which
precludes having the condenser serve as the heat source for the reboiler in an ordin-
ary distillation column. In Fig. 13-16a an external working fluid is used in a way
entirely analogous to a compression refrigeration cycle. In Fig. 13-16/) and c one of
the process streams is used as the working fluid. In Fig. 13-16b the overhead vapor is
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 697
compressed to a pressure high enough for its condensation temperature to exceed the
bubble point of the bottoms; the heat of condensation of the overhead can then be
used to reboil the bottoms. In Fig. 13-16c the stream to be vaporized at the tower
bottom is expanded through a valve to a lower pressure at which its dew point is less
than the bubble point of the overhead vapor; the heat of vaporization can then be
used to condense the overhead. The resultant vapor is then compressed and used as
boil-up at the tower bottom. Reboiler liquid flashing does not lead to as high pres-
sures as overhead vapor recompression; this can be advantageous.
The external-working-fluid scheme requires some extra compression, since the
temperature difference between vaporization and condensation of the fluid must be
enough to overcome the temperature difference of the distillation and provide
temperature-difference driving forces for two heat exchangers. In the other cases only
the temperature-difference driving force for one exchanger need be provided, in
addition to overcoming the temperature difference of the distillation. On the other
hand, the external working fluid may be more suitable in terms of compression
characteristics and other properties than the overhead and bottom streams from the
distillation.
Some additional heat exchange is required in all three systems because of the
general failure of the required condenser duty to match the required reboiler duty,
because of the heat input from the compressor, for control purposes, and/or to make
up for heat leaks. In Fig. 13-16 it is assumed that additional cooling will be required
as a result of these factors, and a trim cooler using external refrigerant or cooling
water is included in each case. In some instances net heat input would be required
instead.
Use of heat pumps and mechanical energy derives the benefits of the
temperature-difference term in Eq. (13-19) when the temperature difference is small,
whereas use of fixed-temperature heat sources and sinks without column cascading
does not. Heat-pump designs are most suitable for close-boiling distillations because
the compression requirements become excessive if the temperature difference to be
overcome is too great. For this reason, they are at a disadvantage for multicompo-
nent distillations. Some of the incentive for this approach is also dampened by the fact
that compressors themselves are not 100 percent efficient.
Use of a heat-pump design for a close-boiling distillation places a premium on
low pressure drop for the vapor flowing up the column. Low-pressure-drop trays and
open packings can therefore be of more interest than usual in such cases.
Specific cases of heat-pumped distillation have been analyzed by Null (1976),
Kaiser et al. (1977), Petterson and Wells (1977), and Shaner (1978), among others.
Examples Figure 13-17 shows one of the industrial applications made of the prin-
ciples developed in Figs. 13-14 to 13-16. The Linde double column, shown in
Fig. 13-17, is commonly used for the fractionation of air into oxygen and nitrogen.
This is a two-column arrangement with a low-pressure column situated physically
above a higher-pressure column. Following the multieffect principle, the condenser
of the high-pressure column is the reboiler of the low-pressure column. The high-
pressure column follows the variant of Fig. 13-146 in which the distillate is relatively
pure but the bottoms is only somewhat enriched in the less volatile component
698 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Gaseous nitrogen product
Liquid
nitrogen
reflux
1.5 aim
-âCX-
High-pressure air
Reboilcr
and
condenser
5.5 aim
Gaseous oxygen
product
Oxygen-enriched
air
Figure 13-17 Linde double column for air separation.
(oxygen). The feed to the high-pressure column enters the process as air at a still
higher pressure; hence this feed can be used as the reboiler heating medium following
the scheme set forth in Fig. 13-15. Another interesting feature is that the liquid-
nitrogen distillate from the high-pressure column is not taken as product but is used
as reflux in the low-pressure column. Because there is more nitrogen than oxygen in
air and because the nitrogen product is in many cases a waste stream which may be
gaseous, no other source of overhead cooling is required. This is a major advantage.
More elaborate variations of the Linde double column have been developed, and
descriptions and analyses of air-fractionation processes in general have been given by
a number of authors (Bliss and Dodge, 1949: Ruhemann. 1949; Scott, 1959; Latimer,
1967).
Another example of industrial use of techniques for increasing the efficiency of
heat supply and removal is the fractionation section of plants for the manufacture of
ethylene and propylene. Two general approaches to this separation are followed in
practice. In a high-pressure process the feed to the demethanizer column is raised to
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 699
3.5 MPa. A high-pressure process usually employs propane and ethylene refrigera-
tion circuits, which are capable of providing cooling at temperatures down to
â 100°C. A low-pressure process employs a methane refrigeration circuit in addition
to the ethylene and propane circuits. As a result the low-pressure process can provide
cooling at much lower temperatures and consequently lower tower pressures are
employed. The added expense of a methane circuit has made the high-pressure
process more common, however.
A flow diagram of the demethanizer and C2 splitter facilities of a typical low-
pressure process as reported by Ruhemann and Charlesworth (1966) is shown in
Fig. 13-18. The feed entering from the deethanizer tower consists of hydrogen,
methane, ethylene, and ethane at a pressure of 1.2 MPa. The goal is to separate
ethylene and ethane products from the hydrogen and methane. Following the scheme
shown in Fig. 13-15, this feed passes through the reboilers of the demethanizer and
one of the two C2 splitter towers. The feed is the sole source of heat for the demethan-
izer and supplies a portion of the reboiler heat to the second C2 splitter. Added
refrigeration is available from the hydrogen plus methane tail gas leaving the process,
which can be reduced to near-atmospheric pressure. The tail gas chills the feed
further in a feed separator drum. Both gas and liquid phases exist in the feed under
these conditions. The gas contains almost all the hydrogen, some methane, and
almost no ethylene; hence it need not be fractionated further. The liquid from the
separator contains part of the methane and almost all the ethylene and ethane; it is
reduced in pressure and fed to the demethanizer, which operates at 520 kPa.
The overhead vapor from the demethanizer is essentially pure methane, which
enters the methane refrigeration circuit directly. In the methane refrigeration circuit
this vapor is compressed and is liquefied in a condenser cooled by the ethylene
refrigeration circuit. Some of the liquid methane formed is returned as reflux to the
demethanizer, and the remainder is used for feed prechilling. The use of a direct feed
of vapor to the methane refrigeration compressor with return of condensed liquid
from that compressor as reflux represents a variant of the vapor recompression
scheme shown in Fig. 13-166.
There are two C2 splitter towers, cascaded in a variant of the Fig. 13-146 scheme.
The high-pressure tower provides a relatively pure distillate (ethylene) and a bottoms
somewhat enriched in ethane. This bottoms is fed to the low-pressure splitter where it
is separated into relatively pure products. Condensing the overhead of the high-
pressure column is a source of part of the reboil heat for the low-pressure column
(multieffect principle).
The ethylene overhead from the low-pressure column is compressed and used to
provide reboil heat to the high-pressure column. This is a direct application of the
vapor-recompression principle shown in Figure 13-166. The overhead vapor from
the low-pressure column passes through two heat exchangers on the way to the
compressor. These exchangers serve to help cool the compressed vapor and chill
the reflux stream to the low-pressure splitter before that reflux stream is flashed down
to column pressure.
Irreversibilities within the column; binary distillation In addition to pressure drop,
irreversibilities within a binary distillation column result from the lack of equilibrium
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ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 701
(a)
(b)
Operating curve .r- ,
coincident with â¢"'""^ '
equilibrium curve
10
(d)
Figure 13-19 Increasing the reversibility within a binary distillation process: (a) ordinary distillation;
finite stages: (b) ordinary distillation; minimum reflux; (c) intermediate reflux and intermediate boil-up:
!,'A. p_,) can be reduced by moving the operating
702 SEPARATION PROCESSES
lines closer to the equilibrium curve. The minimum-reflux condition shown in
Fig. 13-19fc corresponds to the upper and lower operating lines having been moved
as close as possible to the equilibrium curve, and we have already seen [Eq. (13-25)]
that Wn for minimum reflux in ordinary distillation is lower than W'a for any higher
reflux ratio.
Even at minimum reflux there are still substantial driving forces for heat and
mass transfer at compositions in the tower removed from the feed stage in a binary
distillation. These irreversibilities can be reduced by using a different operating line
in portions of the column where the irreversibilities with the original operating lines
were more severe. Such a situation is shown in Fig. 13-19c, where we postulate that
there are two operating lines applying to different parts of the stripping section and
two operating lines applying to different parts of the rectifying section. The operating
lines used closer to the feed have slopes nearer to unity; hence the liquid and vapor
flows nearer the feed are larger than those at the ends of the column. Thus the
situation shown in Fig. 13-19c corresponds to the use of a second reboiler midway up
the stripping section and a second condenser midway down the rectifying section, as
shown in Fig. 13-20. The conditions shown in Fig. 13-19c are still those correspond-
ing to minimum reflux at the feed point; hence the interstage flows at the feed stage
are the same in Fig. 13-19c as in Fig. 13-196, and the overhead condenser duty
corresponding to Fig. 13-19b must be the same as the sum of the duties of the two
condensers above the feed corresponding to Fig. 13-19c. The gain in reversibility is
not manifested as a reduced total heat duty but as a lesser degradation of the heat
energy passing through the column. The heat energy supplied at the intermediate
Figure 13-20 Distillation column with one inter-
»- /' mediate condenser and one intermediate reboiler.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 703
reboiler is supplied at a lower temperature than that to the reboiler at the bottom of
the column, and the heat removed from the intermediate condenser is removed at a
temperature higher than that of the column overhead. In order for this to be attrac-
tive, some way must be found to derive benefits from the differences in temperature
between the two reboilers and/or between the two condensers.
The extreme of reducing thermodynamic irreversibilities within a distillation
column would be to arrange the introduction of reflux to stages above the feed and of
reboiled vapor to stages below the feed in such a way that the operating line at each
stage is coincident with the equilibrium curve, as shown in Fig. 13-19d. A schematic
of a device for carrying out such a process is shown in Fig. 13-21. The reflux must
grow larger on each stage proceeding downward from the top of the column. As a
result, there must be a condenser removing heat from each stage above the feed in
Distillate
Feed â¢
⢠Coolants
Heating media
Figure 13-21 An approach to reversible distilla-
tion.
704 SEPARATION PROCESSES
just the right amount to make the operating line coincident with the equilibrium
curve at the composition corresponding to that stage. Similarly, each stage below the
feed must be equipped with a reboiler to increase the vapor flow upward in the
required pattern. Each reboiler and condenser must employ a heating or cooling
medium with a temperature equal to that of the particular stage.
This hypothetical situation of "reversible "distillation, where the operating and
equilibrium curves are the same, would require an infinite number of stages for any
finite amount of separation. As the equilibrium and operating curves come closer
together, there is less progress per stage along the yx diagram. Thus there is consider-
able expense involved in altering an ordinary distillation to increase its reversibility.
The number of stages required for a given separation becomes greater, and the
required heat duty must be split up between the terminal reboiler and condenser and
those reboilers and condensers necessary to generate the intermediate boilup and
reflux. Offsetting this need for considerable additional capital outlay are two factors:
(l)The heat energy used in the distillation is degraded to a lesser extent. Much of the
reboil heat can be added at temperatures lower than the bottoms temperature, and
much of the heat removal can be effected at temperatures warmer than the overhead
temperature, (2) The reduced vapor and liquid flows toward the product ends of the
cascade may make it possible to reduce the tower diameter at those points or to use
towers of different diameters when so many stages are required for the separation
that more than one tower must be employed. In practice the opportunity for using
lower-pressure steam or any other lower-temperature heating medium in inter-
mediate reboilers does not seem to carry enough incentive to warrant installation of
intermediate reboilers in any but unusual cases. One such is the ethylene-plant
deethanizer described by Zdonik (1977), where hot quench water from elsewhere in
the plant is used to provide heat for an intermediate reboiler. The incentive for
generating intermediate reflux in low-temperature distillation processes is stronger,
since the intermediate reflux can utilize a less severe level of refrigeration than is
required for the overhead. King et al. (1972) present a case study of a demethanizer
from a high-pressure ethylene plant, evaluating the incentive for an intermediate
condenser.
One multiple-tower system which made extensive use of intermediate boil-up in
order to gain the tower diameter advantage (item 2, above) was the process for
manufacture of heavy water D2O by distillation (Murphy et al., 1955). Figure 13-22
shows a flow diagram for the plant constructed for this purpose under the Manhat-
tan Project at Morgantown, West Virginia. Table 13-2 gives construction and operat-
ing details of the plant. The plant received a feed of natural water (also used as
reboiler steam to tower IB) containing 0.0143 atom",.deuterium. All towers together
served as one very large distillation stripping section and produced a bottoms prod-
uct containing 89 atom °0 deuterium. Most of the feedwater was rejected in the other
product, and the recovery fraction of deuterium was quite low even though the purity
was high. Under these conditions the effective ocH2(^D2o is about 1.05. The towers were
run under moderate vacuum since the relative volatility increases substantially as
pressure and hence temperature are reduced. Note that the pressures were not so low
as to preclude the use of cooling water in condensers and that the pressure drops
through the towers were sizable.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 705
CONDENSER ;
Slrippe
water "
0.0139°; D
80,300 kg/h
Product
© water
89 atom
_/UVi percent D
\V~s\ 0.39 kg/h
u
Feed steam
1.14 MPa
0.0143 atom percent D
92,000 kg/h
Waste condensale
0.0143°o D
11,700 kg/h
Figure 13-22 Morgantown water distillation plant. (Adapted from Benedict and Pigford, 1957, p. 418;
used by permission.)
Intermediate boil-up was used at the bottom of each tower. This did not reduce
the net work consumption of the process but did allow the vapor rate to vary by a
factor of 885 through the cascade, from 91 kg/h at the deuterium oxide product end
to 80,300 kg/h at the feed end (all to make 0.39 kg/h of 89% D2O!). This in turn
allowed the tower diameter to be reduced from five 4.6-m-diameter towers in parallel
Table 13-2 Construction and operating conditions of the Morgantown heavy-water
distillation plant (data from Benedict and Pigford, 1957)
No. in Diameter, No. of
Tower
Vapor
Pressure, kPa
D in
bottom,
Tower parallel m
plates
vol., m3
flow, kg/h
Top
Bottom
atom "â
1A 5 4.6
80
2010
(80.300)
8.9
31.8
IB 5 3.7
90
1450
80,300
31.8
71.4
0.117
2A
3.2
72
176
(9,600)
17.2
45.3
2B
2.4
83
118
9,600
45.3
86.0
1.40
3
706 SEPARATION PROCESSES
at the feed end to one 25-cm-diameter tower at the product end. The result was a
major saving in capital cost.
Another advantage lay in the smaller water holdup in the towers at the product
end. There was so much water in this plant that it took 90 days to level out at new
steady-state conditions once the operating parameters were changed. Without the
reduction in tower size at the product end this time would have been greater yet.
It is interesting to explore the reduction in net work consumption of a binary
distillation process which can be accomplished by including a single intermediate
condenser in a distillation column. Benedict (1947) considered the distillation of a
binary close-boiling mixture containing 10 mole percent of the more volatile com-
ponent in the feed (.vA-f = 0.10). The products were assumed to be relatively pure. If
the distillation is run at minimum reflux with no intermediate condenser,
Wn = RT0 F [Eq. (13-24)]. If the distillation is run at 1.25 times the minimum reflux.
W'n= l.25RT0F. If the distillation is made totally reversible (Fig. 13-21),
W'n = 0.325RT0 F. If one intermediate condenser is used at VA = 0.30, and if the reflux
is 1.25 times the minimum at the feed and 1.10 times the minimum at the inter-
mediate reflux point, W'n = 0.655RT0 F. Hence, in this case, one intermediate conden-
ser reduces W'n by 64 percent of the amount which could be conserved by going to a
totally reversible distillation. To realize this benefit it would still be necessary to find
a use for the higher-level heat energy removed at the intermediate condenser.
It is also interesting to explore the behavior of the thermodynamic-efficiency
curve for an ordinary ethanol-water distillation given in Fig. 13-10 in the light of this
discussion. The thermodynamic efficiency is high for low ethanol mole fractions in
the feed, and the efficiency is low when there are high ethanol mole fractions in the
feed. Figure 13-23 depicts an analysis given by Robinson and Gilliland (1950). As is
evident from Fig. 13-23, the ethanol-water system with \d = 0.87 is one wherein the
minimum reflux is determined by a tangent pinch in the upper portion of the tower.
Minimum reflux operating lines for saturated-liquid-feed ethanol mole fractions of
0.56, 0.31, 0.15, and 0.04 are denoted as 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. It is apparent that
greater gaps between the equilibrium curve and the lower operating line exist for
higher feed mole fractions of ethanol; thus the thermodynamic efficiency is very low
at high feed mole fractions. For a high feed mole fraction a large portion of the heat
could be introduced in an intermediate reboiler at a temperature only slightly above
that of the condenser.
Other approaches besides intermediate reboilers and condensers can be used to
derive the same benefits. Pumparounds (liquid withdrawals, cooled and returned to
the column) are used extensively in wide-boiling hydrocarbon distillations (see. for
example, Bannon and Marples, 1978) and serve the same purpose as an intermediate
condenser. A feed preheater provides some but not all of the benefit of an inter-
mediate reboiler; a comparison of those two alternatives for a specific case is pre-
sented by Petterson and Wells (1977). Similarly, for low-temperature distillations,
prechilling of the feed, which can result in multiple feeds, derives some but not all of
the benefits of an intermediate condenser. These alternatives are explored for a
demethanizer column by King et al. (1972).
A prefractionator column (see Fig. 5-34 and Prob. 5-K) can be used to generate
partly enriched feeds for a subsequent main distillation column. The reboiler and
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 707
IIIIIII
Figure 13-23 Degree of irreversibility in an ethanol-water distillation operated at minimum reflux. (Data
from Robinson and Gilliland, 1950.)
condenser of the prefractionator serve the roles of an intermediate reboiler and an
intermediate condenser and provide additional vapor and liquid flows in the vicinity
of the feed composition. Use of a prefractionator therefore results in an energy
savings if one can take advantage of the less extreme temperature levels of the
reboiler and condenser of the prefractionator. Cascaded designs in which the first
column produces only partially enriched products (Fig. 13-146 and c) are in fact
prefractionator designs. The first column supplies extra flows in the vicinity of the
feed composition, and the smaller temperature span of the first column results in less
overall degradation of energy level than the design of Fig. 13-14a.
Freshwater (1961) has pointed out that a heat pump can be combined with an
ordinary distillation design to provide extra flows in the vicinity of the feed composi-
tion. The design of Fig. 13-16b can be modified to withdraw the vapor feed to the
compressor from a plate midway in the rectifying section, the condensed liquid from
the reboiler-condenser being returned to the stage of vapor withdrawal. An ordinary
condenser is then added for the column overhead. This modification provides higher
flows below the vapor-withdrawal stage than above it and reduces the compression
ratio required for the compressor. Similarly, a compressor receiving overhead vapor
or vapor from an intermediate stage in the rectifying section could discharge to an
intermediate reboiler, providing similar advantages but requiring the addition of a
reboiler at the tower bottom. Similar modifications can be made to the heat-pump
schemes in Fig. 13-16a and c.
Gunther (1974) and Mah et al. (1977) point out that operating the rectifying
section of a distillation process at a pressure sufficiently higher than that of the strip-
708 SEPARATION PROCESSES
ping section would make transfer of heat possible between individual plates in the
rectifying section and individual plates in the stripping section. Thus plates high in the
rectifying section could exchange heat with plates high in the stripping section, plates
low in the stripping section could exchange heat with plates low in the rectifying sec-
tion, and intermediate plates could exchange heat with intermediate plates. The net
result would be to give additional boil-up on some, most, or all of the plates below the
feed and to give additional condensation on some, most, or all of the plates above the
feed in the direction of the process shown in Fig. 13-21. This form of cascading
would reduce the internal irreversibilities of the distillation and would require less
temperature span than the configurations shown in Fig. 13-14. Control of such a
distillation would become more complex, however.
Isothermal distillation Distillation is usually carried out at a relatively uniform pres-
sure with the temperature varying from stage to stage to maintain saturation condi-
tions. In principle, it is possible to carry out a distillation with both pressure and
temperature varying substantially from stage to stage or, in another extreme, to carry
out a distillation with essentially the same temperature on each stage but with
pressure varying from stage to stage to maintain saturation. Such a process could be
called isothermal distillation.
Distillation at an essentially constant pressure is by far the most common
approach because it lends itself to the common distillation-column configuration
where the vapor phase travels upward under the sole impetus of the pressure drop
from plate to plate. If the temperature were to be maintained constant from stage to
stage, it would be necessary for the pressure to increase from stage to stage in the
direction of vapor flow. As a result, there would have to be compressors between all
stages to move the vapor to a higher pressure. The expense associated with building
the individual stages would probably also be greater, since it is necessary to isolate
the stages more from each other. The expense associated with the compression is
usually prohibitive because compressors are relatively costly to build and operate.
One situation where isothermal distillation has been used to advantage is in the
process for manufacturing ethylene and propylene from refinery gases and naphtha,
outlined in Fig. 13-24. In the high-pressure version of these plants the gas stream
typically must be compressed from approximately atmospheric pressure up to about
3.5 MPa before entering the demethanizer column, which removes hydrogen and
methane. The compression is generally carried out in four stages to prevent high
temperatures which might cause polymerization within the compressors and to
reduce the work input required.
Figure 13-25 shows a scheme proposed by Schutt and Zdonik (1956) for accom-
plishing some product separation during the course of this multistage compression.
The operation amounts to an isothermal distillation. The effluent from each stage of
compression is cooled to perhaps 43°C in a water-cooled heat exchanger. This cool-
ing causes some hydrocarbon material to liquefy after each stage since the stream has
been raised to a higher pressure within each stage. This liquid is removed in a
separator drum and is made to flow countercurrent to the gas stream by flashing it
into the separator drum at the next lower pressure. The result is a four-stage isother-
mal distillation, equivalent to four stages in the rectifying section of a distillation
o â .
. 5i
if M
oo
Z C"
C OrA
^ â ob
So
< ~ Uu
â .«
_ = ""*'
UJ 0.
noval of water,
cid gases, and
acetylene
RKTRKATMFNT
u
C
C
UJ
h.
0
Q£
CL
&
o
f
0.
â¢g
F
a
=S
â¢R
s
C Mj
o
£
i "^
a
T3
7- 0
I
51
c
â¢
u
1
u
u
*
u
HI
o u 5s
s «
c
W OO v^
1
<2S
â
5 o ">
B
~ ^ «
6
5 'T
H
T
S
1
z
199
710 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Gases to
FIRST STAGE SECOND STAGE THIRD STACK FOURTH STAGE distillation
section
(- 3.5 MPa)
IC4 I
Figure 13-25 Four-stage isothermal distillation during compression in manufacture of ethylene and
propylene.
column. The hydrocarbon liquid leaving the lowest-pressure separator is in equilib-
rium with the gas phase at the lowest interstage pressure, and the four stages of
distillation have served to remove heavier hydrocarbons efficiently. The result is a
lesser amount of â¬4 material entering the demethanizer, deethanizer, and depropan-
izer towers of Fig. 13-28, with a commensurate reduction of the heat input required
in those columns.
The inclusion of this isothermal distillation into the compressor sequence in-
creases the vapor flow through the compressors somewhat, but the refluxing liquid
stream is relatively small and the increased compressor-capacity requirement does
not usually offset the gain made by the four-stage distillation. This is a rather unusual
situation where the energy being put into the vapor stream for another purpose may
be partially used to accomplish some separation at the same time.
Multicomponent distillation The conditions under which reversibility can be ap-
proached in multicomponent separations have been explored by Grunberg (1956),
Petyluk et al. (1965), and Fonyo (1974a), among others. The need for reversible
addition and removal of heat over the boiling range of the mixture in reboilers and
condensers is apparent, and the reduction of energy consumption through the use of
side reboilers and condensers at the appropriate temperature is a direct extension
from binary distillation. The most interesting result, however, is that a reversible
separation of a multicomponent mixture into its constituents requires that each
column section remove only one component from the product of that section. For
example, for a four-component mixture ABCD, where A has the greatest volatility
and D the least, the rectifying section of the first distillation column would remove D
from ABC, and the stripping section would remove A from BCD. Thus the two
products would be a mixture of all A with some B and C (distillate) and a mixture of
all D with some B and C (bottoms). This is different from conventional distillation
practice, where one makes sharp separations between components of adjacent volatil-
ity, i.e., separating AB in the first column from CD, or A from BCD. or ABC from D.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 711
Approaching reversibility requires separating components of extreme volatility
instead. This introduces another dimension of possibilities for designing sequences of
columns for multicomponent mixtures; earlier columns in the sequence can, as their
main function, separate any pair of components, not necessarily those adjacent in
volatility.
Alternatives far ternary mixtures Figure 13-26 shows eight different alternative distil-
lation configurations for separating a mixture of three components into relatively
pure single-component products. Configurations 1 and 2 separate one component
from the other two in a first column and then separate the remaining binary mixture
in a subsequent column. Configuration 3 follows the concept of separating the ex-
treme components first, with B appearing to a substantial extent in both products.
The two resulting binaries could then be separated in two different subsequent
columns (not shown); however, these separations can be made as well in a single
column, where B can be obtained as an intermediate sidestream in any purity
required. Configuration 3 extends the prefractionator concept to the ternary separa-
tion. Configuration 4 differs from configuration 3 in that the first column does not
have a reboiler and a condenser; instead it communicates with the second column
ABC
ABC
ABC
ABC
Figure 13-26 Alternative configurations for separating a ternary mixture by distillation.
712 SEPARATION PROCESSES
through both vapor and liquid streams at each end. This has been called a thermally
coupled configuration (Stupin and Lockhart, 1972). In configurations 5 and 6 the
intermediate product is taken from a single column as a sidestream above (liquid)
and below (vapor) the feed, respectively. As shown in Chap. 7, the sidestream pro-
duct must contain a significant amount of A in configuration 5 and C in
configuration 6. This then leads to the use of a sidestream stripper to purify the
sidestream withdrawn above the main feed (configuration 7) or a sidestream rectifier
to purify the sidestream withdrawn below the main feed (configuration 8). The
configurations in Fig. 13-26 are shown with total condensers and liquid products.
Partial condensers and/or some vapor products could be used as well. The number of
possibilities would become even larger if cascading or side reboilers and condensers
were considered.
Rod and Marek (1959) and Heaven (1969) have explored the relative advantages
of configurations 1 and 2 and find that the scheme which removes the component (A
or C) present in greater amount first is preferred, with some advantage for
configuration 2 when A and C are roughly equal in amount. The result is also
affected by the component volatilities and the desired product purities. Petyluk et al.
(1965) explored various attributes of configurations 1 to 4 for a close-boiling ternary
mixture. Stupin and Lockhart (1972) explored costs of configurations 1,2, and 4 for a
particular ternary distillation, finding the thermally coupled scheme most advan-
tageous. Doukas and Luyben (1978) compared configurations 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 in
detail for distillation of a benzene-toluene-xylene mixture with varying compositions.
Tedder and Rudd (1978a) compared all configurations except number 4 for distilla-
tion of various ternary mixtures of hydrocarbons, with set product characteristics.
The product purities themselves can also be important variables affecting the choice
of configuration.
From these studies and intuition it can be inferred that configuration 5 is attrac-
tive when the amount of A is small and/or when the purity specifications for A in B
are not tight. Similarly, configuration 6 is attractive when the amount of C is small
and/or when the purity specifications for C in B are not tight. The prefractionator or
thermally coupled schemes (configurations 3 and 4) are often attractive when there is
a large amount of B, with significant amounts of both A and C. With smaller
amounts of B and significant amounts of A and C, the sidestream stripper and
rectifier schemes (configurations 7 and 8) can be favored: configuration 7 would be
more attractive when the amount of A is substantially less than the amount of C, and
configuration 8 would be more attractive when the amount of A is substantially more
than that of C. These schemes must also be compared with configuration 1 (amount
of C substantially greater than that of A) and configuration 2 (amount of C less
than or similar to that of A). A very complete separation and/or tight separation factor
for A and B gives extra incentive for configurations 1 and 7, whereas a very complete
separation and/or tight separation factor for B and C gives extra incentive for
configurations 2 and 8. In the middle region where all components are of comparable
amounts in the feed and have comparable recovery fractions, there appears to be no
good a priori way of eliminating any configurations other than 5 and 6.
Finally, it should be noted that the problem is not so much one of separating
components as it is one of separating products. Thus the same type of analysis of the
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 713
column configurations in Fig. 13-26 can be applied to the separation of any mixture
of many components into three different products.
Sequencing distillation columns When more than three products are to be separated,
the number of possibilities becomes far greater than the alternatives shown in
Fig. 13-26 for three products. Studies of techniques for generating multicolumn se-
quences for four or more products have for the most part been limited to sequences of
simple columns separating adjacent components and having no sidestreams. This is
not to say that such schemes are best, and for any complex distillation problem one
should contemplate a number of different cases, including some with sidestreams,
thermal coupling, prefractionators, sidestream strippers and/or rectifiers, cascaded
columns, heat pumps, and/or side reboilers and condensers.
Even for sequences of simple distillation columns separating adjacent compo-
nents, the number of possibilities becomes large. If a mixture is to be separated into R
products by R â 1 simple distillation columns, we can develop a recurrence relation-
ship for the number of possible column sequences SR as a function of R. The first
column which the feed enters will takey of the products overhead and hence will take
R âj products in the bottoms. There will be Sj sequences by which they overhead
products can be separated in subsequent distillations. Similarly there are SR_J se-
quences by which the bottoms products can be separated subsequently. Hence the
number of different column sequences which separate R products by taking j prod-
ucts overhead in the first column is SjSR_j. Allowing now for all possible separa-
tions that could have been performed by the first column in the sequence, we have
K-l
=X
(13-37)
Starting with the known facts that S{ = 1 (so as to count sequences in which one
product is isolated in the first column) and S2 = 1, we can generate the values of SR
shown in Table 13-3 from Eq. (13-37) (Heaven, 1969). The number of possible
column sequences rises rapidly as the number of components and products rises.
Table 13-3 can also be generated from a closed-form equation
R
N\(N-l)l
(13-38)
(Thompson and King, 1972).
Several studies have been made of ways of systematically identifying the best or
one of the best sequences from among the many possibilities for a multiproduct
system. Hendry and Hughes (1972) used a dynamic-programming technique to
Table 13-3 Number of column sequences .s',( for separating a mixture into R products
Products R 2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Column sequences SR 1
2
5
14
42
132
429
1430
4862
16,796
714 SEPARATION PROCESSES
locate the optimum path through a tree of separation possibilities, assuming that the
optimum design of each individual separator possibility is independent of its location
in the sequence. Tedder and Rudd (1978b) explore suboptimizations of individual
distillation columns and maintain that this is a relatively good assumption. Rathore
et al. (1974) have explored the extension of this approach to the case where cascaded
column design is included. For large problems the computing requirements for these
dynamic-programming approaches become quite large. In an effort to eliminate at
least some of the search space. Westerberg and Stephanopoulos (1975) suggested a
branch-and-bound strategy for screening alternative configurations.
Because of the large combinatorial problem resulting when many products are to
be made, simplification of the screening procedure by incorporating one or more
heuristics, or rules of thumb, can be attractive. Thompson and King (1972) in-
vestigated the policy of identifying those candidate distillations which could lead to
the desired final products and then selecting as the next step in a sequence that
candidate distillation which had the lowest predicted costs. The sequencing
procedure was repeated iteratively, the predicted costs for different separations being
updated on the basis of more complete designs of separators used in previous itera-
tions, proportioned according to the equilibrium-stage requirement. Rodrigo and
Seader (1975) combined heuristic and branched-search methods by backtracking
and branching the search for the best sequence, following the order dictated by the
heuristic of including the cheapest candidate separator next. The number of se-
quences to be considered was reduced by means of an updated upper bound on the
cost of the best sequence. Gomez and Seader (1976) found that a further improve-
ment was to rely upon the heuristic that a separation is least expensive when con-
ducted in the absence of nonkey components, so as to predict a lower-bound cost for
sequences beginning with a particular next-included separator. Groups of possibili-
ties whose lower bound exceeds the cost of a known sequence can then be eliminated.
The distillation-sequencing problem is a two-level problem, where the design of
each column should be optimized, as well as the sequence being optimized. Solving
both levels of problem simultaneously is quite complex, although methods exist to
cope with this (see, for example, Westerberg and Stephanopoulos, 1975). It is
probably best to optimize individual column designs after the few best candidate
sequences have been identified. Optimization of reflux ratio, pressure, and recovery
fractions is discussed in Appendix D, along with the optimal degree of overdesign.
For sequenced columns, the recovery fractions in individual columns can also be
optimized for components that are keys in more than one column.
For initial design and screening and for distillation situations with many prod-
ucts, it is usually inefficient to use a rigorous or highly systematic method to
generate the most attractive candidate sequences. Instead, it is easier to use a few
simple heuristics to generate some sequences which should be near optimal. Studies
of the relative costs of different sequences of simple distillation columns for three-.
four-, and five-product systems have been made by Lockhart (1947), Harbert (1957).
Heaven (1969), Nishimura and Hiraizumi (1971), Freshwater and Henry (1975), and
Freshwater and Ziogou (1976), in addition to the studies mentioned earlier for
ternary systems. From these results, four simple heuristics can be inferred for se-
quencing simple distillation columns:
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 715
Heuristic 1. Separations where the relative volatility of the key components is close to
unity should be performed in the absence of nonkey components. In a distillation, W'n
was shown to be proportional to the product of the interstage flow and the difference
in reciprocal temperature between the reboiler and the condenser. Therefore, when
one is selecting a sequence of distillation columns to accomplish the separation of a
multicomponent mixture into relatively pure products, it is usually best to avoid
column sequences wherein large interstage flows appear in a column which has a
large temperature difference between reboiler and condenser, to avoid making W'n the
product of two large numbers. Since interstage flows are roughly proportional to
(BLK-HK â l)~'f [Eq. (13-21)], this indicates that it is desirable to select column
sequences which do not cause nonkey components to be present in columns where
the keys are close together in volatility. In this way the temperature drops and
internal flows in these towers are kept as low as possible. In other words, the most
difficult separations should be reserved until last in a sequence.
Heuristic 2. Sequences which remove the components one by one in column overheads
should be favored. Returning to the Underwood equation for minimum reflux
[Eq. (8-94)],
we see that adding nonkey components to the overhead of a column necessarily
causes the minimum required interstage vapor flow to increase. The vapor flow is
directly proportional to both the reboiler duty and the condenser duty. If any effect
of partially vaporized feeds is neglected, it is then advantageous to have as few
components as possible in the distillate from a tower, since this will enable the vapor
flow to be as low as possible. This line of reasoning leads to the direct sequence of
towers shown in Fig. 13-27 for separating multicomponent mixtures. The compo-
nents are taken as overhead products one at a time, in the order of descending
volatility.
When some of the components being separated have boiling points below am-
bient temperature, some of the columns must run under pressure and/or use refriger-
ant as a condenser cooling medium. The sequence of towers shown in Fig. 13-27
avoids the presence of a light diluent in any of the overheads and hence gives the least
stringent conditions of pressure or refrigeration possible in the towers past the first.
On the other hand, this ordering scheme causes the reboiler temperatures to be the
highest possible, on the average, thus requiring higher-temperature heating media.
This is not usually an important factor, however.
Heuristic 3. A product composing a large fraction of the feed should be removed first, or,
more generally, sequences which give a more nearly equimolal division of the feed
between the distillate and bottoms product should be favored. The overhead reflux flow
and the vapor flow from the reboiler cannot both be adjusted independently in a
distillation which gives fixed distillate and bottoms flows. Fixing the reflux flow fixes
the reboiler boil-up rate. If the distillate molar flow rate is much less than the
bottoms molar flow rate, the value of L/V in the rectifying section will be much closer
to unity than the value of V'/L in the stripping section. In such a case the rectifying
716 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Components
ABCDEF
I.
r
L
BCDEF CDEF DEF EF F
Figure 13-27 "Direct" sequence of distillation columns for separating a multicomponent mixture.
section will most likely be running at a much higher reflux ratio than is necessary for
the separation, and because of the resulting high temperature and composition driv-
ing forces the operation of the rectifying section will be highly irreversible thermody-
namically. If the bottoms product is substantially less than the distillate product, the
reasoning is reversed and the stripping section will be highly irreversible thermody-
namically. When the amounts of overhead and bottoms products are about the same,
the reflux ratios in the sections above and below the feed will be better balanced and
the operation will be more reversible. As a result the energy requirement (steam or
refrigeration) for the separation should be less.
Heuristic 4. Separations involving very high specified recovery fractions should be
reserved until late in a sequence. High product purities do not require higher reflux
ratios but do require a greater number of stages, as we have seen in Chap. 9. Hence a
particular separation of key components which requires very high recovery fractions
of these components in their respective products will require a large number of stages
without requiring any greater reflux requirements. If nonkey components are present
when this separation is made, the necessary column diameter will be greater and the
extra stages needed to provide the high product purities will all be larger in diameter.
Hence there is an advantage in reduced equipment size to be obtained by reserving
separations with high specified purities or recovery fractions until late in a multicom-
ponent distillation column sequence. This heuristic can be combined with the first to
become "perform the most difficult separations last."
These four heuristics for column sequencing often conflict with each other, one
heuristic leading to one particular column sequence and another heuristic leading to
another. In any real design situation it may well be necessary to examine several
different sequences in order to see which of these heuristics is dominant. The real
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 717
value of the heuristics comes in reducing the number of logical alternative sequences
which should be examined, because a large number of the possible sequences will not
be favored to any substantial degree by any of the heuristics. Seader and Westerberg
(1977) suggest a systematic way of applying these heuristics in an evolutionary
design.
The single heuristic of including the cheapest candidate separator next in a
sequence has been found to be rough but effective in the work mentioned above on
systematic screening of sequencing alternatives. This is a generalization of the first
and fourth heuristics, and (to a much lesser extent) the other two as well.
These heuristics apply to sequences of simple distillation columns. Freshwater
and Ziogou (1976) have shown that allowance for column cascading can alter the
optimal sequence. Control factors also become important in determining the best
sequence when column cascading is used.
Example: Manufacture of Ethylene and Propylene Figure 13-24 gives a schematic
outline of the thermal cracking process which is used on a very large scale to manu-
facture ethylene and propylene from other hydrocarbons. Ethylene and propylene
produced by such plants form the core of the petrochemical industry. The feed to
such a plant may be a mixture of light refinery hydrocarbon gases and/or a naphtha
stream consisting of hydrocarbons in the molecular-weight range of 80 to 150. Ethy-
lene and propylene are formed by the thermal cracking of ethane, propane, and/or
the naphtha hydrocarbons. The complex hydrocarbon mixture emanating from the
cracking step must then be separated into
1. Relatively pure ethylene and propylene products
2. Ethane and propane for recycle as cracking feedstocks for the manufacture of additional
ethylene and propylene
3. Methane and hydrogen for use as fuel
4. Products heavier than propane which can ultimately be used for gasoline or other purposes
The separation involves the distillation of low-boiling gas mixtures, and as a result a
high pressure is required. Since cracking is favored by low pressure, the compression
step occurs between the cracking and separation steps. Before distillation the gas
mixture is pretreated to remove H2O, CO2, H2S, and acetylene by a number of
different separation processes.
When the feeds to the process are primarily refinery gases, a typical feed to the
separation train is as shown in Table 13-4. The sequence of distillation towers most
commonly used for isolating the products specified above when the feed is primarily
refinery gases is shown in Fig. 13-28. This corresponds to a high-pressure plant,
where there is no methane refrigeration.
Notice that the column arrangement in Fig. 13-28 represents two changes from
the simple direct sequence shown in Fig. 13-27 (heuristic 2). Both these changes have
been made to reserve a difficult separation until last so it can be performed as a
binary distillation (heuristic 1). In this case the two difficult separations are ethylene
from ethane and propylene from propane, both of which have relative volatilities
quite close to 1. The ethylene-ethane and propylene-propane separations also
718 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Table 13-4 Typical feed (data from Schutt and
Zdonik, 1956)
Component
Component
Hydrogen. H2
Methane. C,
Ethylene, Cj"
Ethane. C?
18
15
24
15
Propylene, C2S
Propane. C°
Heavies, CX
14
6
have very high purity requirements (heuristic 4) and require large towers in both
diameter and height.
In addition to providing the benefits of the direct tower sequence (heuristic 1),
placing the deethanizer before the depropanizer also provides more nearly equal
distillate and bottoms flows from the tower following the demethanizer (heuristic 3).
Cracking a naphtha feed provides more heavy products. In naphtha-cracking plants
the deethanizer is sometimes placed before the demethanizer in the scheme of
Fig. 13-28 (heuristic 3).
Feed
H2.C,
c?:cs
c}.c;.c}.c:.Ct
cr
cf.cs.c;
c?:a
-cf
â c;
c;
Figure 13-28 Typical distillation column sequence for separation of products in light olefin manufacture
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 719
Figure 13-29 A panoramic view of the Sinclair-Koppers 230 million kilogram per year ethylene plant built
by Pullman Kellogg at Houston. Texas. The pyrolysis furnaces arc the rectangular units in the far left
background. The tall tower at the right is the demethanizer. The tallest tower, painted in two colors, is
the C2 splitter. Just to the left of it are two large towers which compose the C3 splitter, operating in
series. (Pullman Kellogg, Inc., Houston, Texas.)
In a low-pressure plant (Fig. 13-18) the deethanizer column typically precedes
the demethanizer, as opposed to the high-pressure sequence in Fig. 13-28. This is
done because the demethanizer feed must be cooled to a temperature so much lower
in the low-pressure process that it is worthwhile to cool only that portion of the total
feed which necessarily requires the very low temperature for distillation.
The distillation section of a typical ethylene plant is shown in Fig. 13-29. More
details on processes for the manufacture of ethylene and propylene are given by
Schutt and Zdonik (1956) and Frank (1968).
Sequencing multicomponent separations in general We have so far discussed criteria
for sequencing distillations which create several products out of a multicomponent
mixture. If other separation processes can be used as well, the possibilities become
still more complex: (1) the number of possible sequences (Table 13-3) grows in
proportion to the number of different separation processes considered; (2) different
separation processes generally produce different orderings of individual-component
separation factors, making different groupings of components in products possible:
and (3) when mass separating agents are added, additional components are in-
troduced and must usually be separated subsequently for recycle.
720 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Most of the systematic approaches suggested for sequencing distillations can be
extended to the case where more than one separation method is considered to be
available; in fact, many of the examples which have been considered allow extractive
distillation, extraction, and/or other processes as alternatives to distillation. The
dynamic-programming approach (Hendry and Hughes, 1972; etc.) becomes more
complex if mass separating agents are allowed to be recovered more than one step
after they are introduced, but the other methods mentioned previously (Thompson
and King, 1972; Westerberg and Stephanopoulos, 1975; Rodrigo and Seader, 1975;
Gomez and Seader, 1976) handle this possibility.
Of the sequencing heuristics listed for distillation, number 2 is specific for distil-
lation and some other separation processes, but the other three extend readily to
separations in general, as does the rough criterion of "cheapest first." In addition,
three more sequencing heuristics can be generated for cases where several different
candidate separation processes are considered.
Heuristic 5. Favor sequences which yield the minimum necessary number of products.
Equivalently, avoid sequences which separate components which should ultimately
be in the same product. This results in the minimum number of separators, which in
most cases is best. Thompson and King (1972) explore this criterion in more detail
and propose a product-separability matrix as a systematic method of keeping track
of feasible product splits.
Heuristic 6. When alternative separation methods are available for the same product
split, (1) discourage consideration of any method giving a separation factor close to
unity, e.g., less than 1.05, and (2) compare the separation factors attainable with the
alternative methods in the light of previous experience with those separation methods
(Seader and Westerberg, 1977). For example, Souders (1964) compares the typical
improvements in separation factor needed to make extraction and/or extractive
distillation preferable to distillation, using economic factors for that time.
Heuristic 7. When a mass separating agent is used, favor recovering it in the next
separation step unless it improves separation factors for candidate subsequent separa-
tions. This is an extension of heuristic 3. since a mass separating agent is usually
present in large proportions.
Reducing Energy Consumption for Other Separation Processes
Much less attention has been paid to means of reducing the energy consumption of
separations other than distillation, both because distillation is so common and be-
cause the energy separating agent in distillation is so easily exchanged between
points in a process.
Mass-separating-agent processes In distillation, reversibility could be approached by
adding or removing heat reversibly from additional stages so as to make the succes-
sion of operating lines become more nearly coincident with the equilibrium curve, or
by cascading columns for more efficient heat utilization. If we consider an analogous
approach to make a separation with mass separating agent more reversible, the
matter becomes more difficult.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 721
For example, in the fractionating absorber of Fig. 13-11, moving the operating
line above the feed closer to the equilibrium curve would require that absorbent
liquid be added to each stage above the feed. In addition, in order to conceive a
reversible process we would have to postulate that the absorbent liquid stream added
to each stage was saturated with respect to the light components being separated at
the composition of that stage. This would require some scheme for presaturating the
liquid entering each stage with these components, e.g., expanding portions of the top
gas product and regenerated bottoms gas product reversibly to saturation conditions
while recovering the work generated. This would be highly complex and is never
done. It would also be necessary to remove absorbent liquid reversibly from stages
below the feed point in the fractionating absorber. This would be an even more
difficult procedure requiring, for example, reversible distillation processes treating
each of these streams. It is much easier to exchange energy than it is to exchange
matter in an analogous fashion.
In some cases of single-solute transfer and highly curved operating lines, another
approach which can reduce the energy consumption of absorber-stripper operations
is to remove a portion of the partly regenerated absorbent from a level midway down
the regenerator and then add it to the absorber at an appropriate level midway down
that column [see part (/) of Prob. 6-N]. This has the effect of making the curvature
of the operating lines match that of the equilibrium curve to a greater extent.
Rate-governed processes; the ideal cascade Rate-governed separation processes differ
from equilibration processes in that the separating agent cannot be reused from stage
to stage in a multistage system. This means that energy must be introduced at every
stage in proportion to the interstage flows in a rate-governed process. Consequently,
the energy consumption becomes infinite in both extremesâminimum stages and
infinite interstage flows, on the one hand, and minimum flows and infinite stages, on
the other. The minimum total energy consumption occurs at an intermediate
condition.
Energy consumption for the original gaseous-diffusion process for separating
uranium isotopes was very large, and as a result the theoretical analysis yielding the
design conditions for minimum energy consumption in multistage rate-governed
processes was worked out at that time (Cohen, 1951; Benedict and Pigford, 1957).
Pratt (1967) and Wolf et al. (1976) summarize more recent improvements in the
analysis. The theory, presented also in the first edition of this book, leads to
the concept of the so-called "ideal" cascade, which minimizes both total energy
consumption and total equipment volume. In the ideal cascade the interstage flows at
any point are exactly twice the minimum flows which would give a pinch at that
point. Thus the flows are least at either end of the cascade and are largest in the
vicinity of the feed stage for separation of a binary mixture. For separation factors
close to unity, e.g., in isotope separations, the ideal cascade requires a number of
stages equal to twice the minimum number that would correspond to infinite flows.
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722 SEPARATION PROCESSES
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Gunther, A. (1974): Chem. Eng., Sept. 16, p. 140.
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Hougen. O. A., K. M. Watson, and R. A. Ragatz (1959): "Chemical Process Principles." 2d ed., vol. 2,
pp. 968 969, Wiley, New York.
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King, C. J., D. W. Gantz, and F. J. Barnes (1972): Ind. Eng. Chem. Process. Des. Dev.. 11:271.
Kirkbride, C. G., and J. W. Bertetti (1943): Ind. Eng. Chem.. 35:1242.
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McBride, R. B., and D. L. McKinley (1965): Chem. Eng. Prog., 61(3):81.
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Null, H. R. (1976): Chem. Eng. Prog.. 72(7):58.
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New York.
Petterson, W C. and T A. Wells (1977): Chem. Eng.. Sept. 26, p. 79.
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171 (July 30): 133 (Sept. 10).
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 723
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Seader, J. D., and A. W. Westerberg (1977): AlChE J., 23:951.
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PROBLEMS
Dissolved salts, wt "â
2.0
3.45
4.0
6.0
8.0
12.0
bp elevation, °C
0.177
0.311
0.363
0.564
0.783
1.285
13-A, Draw qualitative operating diagrams for distillation of a relatively ideal mixture by each of the
two-tower schemes shown in Fig. 13-14. Show the various operating lines for both towers on the same
diagram in each case, i.e., one diagram for each scheme.
13-B, Perry and Chilton (1973, p. 13-41) report that at 101.3 kPa and 64.86°C the system ethanol-
benzene-water forms an azeotrope containing 22.8 mol "â ethanol. 53.9 mol "â benzene, and 23.3 mol "â
water. Taking advantage of the fact that the composition of the equilibrium vapor is the same as that of the
liquid at the azeotrope, and using available vapor-pressure data, find the minimum possible work con-
sumption of an isothermal process separating this azeotropic liquid mixture into three relatively pure
liquid products at 64.86°C.
13-C2 Stoughton and Lietzke (1965) report the following datat for the boiling-point elevation caused by
the dissolved species in seawater at different degrees of concentration at a total pressure of 3.14 kPa. The
boiling point of pure water at this pressure is 25.0°C.
Natural seawater contains 3.45 weight percent dissolved salts.
(a) Find the minimum possible work requirement for recovering .1 m3 of fresh water from a very
large volume of natural seawater with feed and products at 25°C. If energy is supplied as electric power at
0.8 cent per megajoule, find the minimum possible energy cost as cents per cubic meter of fresh water. (A
target total cost for equipment, energy, labor, etc., for a successful seawater conversion process is 25 cents
per cubic meter of fresh water.) V
(b) Find the minimum possible energy cost if the products of the process are fresh water and doubly
concentrated brine (6.9 weight percent dissolved salts).
13-D2 Referring to the data for Loeb reverse osmosis membranes shown in Table 1-2, find the energy
consumption per cubic meter to recover purified water from a very large volume of water containing
5000 ppm NaCl at 25°C, with A/> across the membrane equal to 4.15 MPa. Assume (somewhat unrealist-
ically) that the net work consumption is entirely associated with the pressure drop across the membrane,
that work can be recovered from the exit brine completely, and that the energy input required to combat
concentration polarization is negligible. Compute the thermodynamic efficiency of this process, assuming
that the properties of NaCl solutions are the same as those reported for seawater solutions in Prob. 13-C.
t Additional thermodynamic data for seawater solutions are given by Bromley et al. (1974).
724 SEPARATION PROCESSES
In process a, seawater is partially frozen using an external refrigerant at a single temperature level. In
process /-. seawater is sprayed into a vacuum at a pressure such that the boiling point of the brine formed is
less than the freezing point of the brine. The cooling required to freeze a portion of the feed seawater comes
from evaporation of another portion of the water. The evaporated water vapor is compressed and fed to a
melter operating at a higher pressure such that the condensation temperature of the vapor is higher than
the melting point of the ice; hence the heat of condensation of the vapor is removed through the heat of
fusion of the ice. Compute the energy consumption of each process and the cost of that energy (cents/per
cubic meter of fresh water) subject to the following assumptions:
1. The feed seawater is fully cooled to the freezer temperature by heat exchange against the products.
Only latent heat effects need be considered in the freezers and the melter.
2. Energy requirements for pumping and agitation (except for vapor compression) may be ignored.
3. Additional refrigeration to remove heat from heat leaks into the system and to remove heat input from
the compressor may be neglected.
4. The feed seawater contains 3.45 percent dissolved salts and the product brine contains 6.9 percent
dissolved salts. The freezing-point depressions for these two concentrations are 1.95 and 4.1°C,
respectively.
5. The freezers and the melter provide simple equilibrium between liquid and solid.
6. The filters provide a complete separation of phases.
7. The equilibrium condensation temperature of the vapor in the melter must be 1°C above the freezing
point of the liquid (scheme ft).
8. The equilibrium condensation temperature of the vapor in the freezer must be 1°C below the freezing
point of the liquid (scheme ft).
Sea-water feed
Ice + brine
Brine
-Yeezer
Filter
0000(1)'
i
Refrigeration Ice
("I
Compressor
Water vapor
Figure 13-30 Freezing processes for seawater conversion: (a) simple refrigerated freezer; (ft) evaporative
freezing.
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 725
9. In scheme a. the refrigerant must be supplied at a temperature 3°C below the freezing point of the
liquid. The thermodynamic efficiency of the refrigeration system is 40 percent.
10. The cost of energy is 0.8 cent per megajoule. In scheme b the compressor is adiabatic, with a work
efficiency of 90 percent.
13-Fj Staging proved to be of benefit in Example 13-2 for reducing the separating agent requirement.
Would there be any benefit to staging in (a) Example 13-1 or (b) Example 13-3? Explain your answers.
13-G2 (a) Repeat part (b) of Example 13-1 if the methane-rich product can now be expanded isenthal-
pically to 138 kPa.
(b) Find the product compositions from the process of Fig. 13-9 if no auxiliary refrigeration is used
in steady-state operation and if the methane-rich product may be expanded isenthalpically to 138 kPa.
13-H2 Find the thermodynamic efficiency of the heavy-water distillation process described in Fig. 13-22
and Table 13-2. Assume that the separation is between H2O and D2O; neglect the existence of HDO.
13-13 Fig. 13-31 is the flow diagram for a demethanizer column following a deethanizer and receiving a
feed of hydrogen, methane, ethylene, and ethane in an ethylene manufacturing plant. The process scheme
uses ethylene and methane refrigerants at the approximate temperatures indicated in Fig. 13-31. The
tower itself operates at approximately 620 kPa.
(a) What is gained by creating two separate liquid feeds to the column and by having the feed pass
through two separator drums?
(b) What is gained by the use of the expander and of the Joule-Thomson valve? (The expander
produces shaft work from a gas expansion, but generally that work is not used gainfully elsewhere.)
(c) Explain the logic leading to the particular sequence of heat exchangers which is employed.
JOUl.E-THOMPSON
EXPANSION VALVh
139 K
Tail gas
(H2.CH4.someC2)
- 140 kPa
Refrigeration supplied at approximate
temperatures indicated (ref.)
Refrigeration
recuperation
. some CH4
Figure 13-31 Demethanizer flow scheme. (Adapted from Lahine, 1959: used by permission.)
726 SEPARATION PROCESSES
( 0.99): the tower contains 100 plates: and
the measured temperatures and pressures are as follows:
Location
Temp.. K Pressure. MPa
Vapor returning to tower from reboiler
263.3
1.862
Overhead vapor, before compressor
238.3
1.655
Condensing vapor, in tubes of reboiler
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 727
The relative volatility of ethylene to ethane at 1.65 to 1.86 MPa as a function of liquid composition has
been determined as follows:
XC,H,
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
ZC,H, C,H,
1.64
1.60
1.56
1.54
1.52
1.46
SOURCE: Data from Davison and Hays (1958).
Vapor pressures of the pure components are as tabulated below. The relative volatility is less than the ratio
of the vapor pressures because of vapor-phase nonidealities.
Vapor pressure, MPa
Temperature. K Ethylene
Ethane
235
250
265
1.49
2.32
3.39
0.82
1.30
1.94
(a) If compressor inefficiencies are neglected, the energy input to the process (compressor work) is
needed (1) to overcome pressure drop associated with vapor flow from plate to plate, (2) to supply a
driving force for heat transfer in the combined reboiler-condenser, and (3) to provide the thermodynamic
minimum work of separation and supply driving forces for heat and mass transfer on the plates. Calculate
the percentages of the total energy input required for each of these three purposes, using the data given.
(ft) A suggested modification of the design to reduce energy consumption involves using two differ-
ent vapor-recompression condenser-reboiler loops, each with its own compressor. One of these would
withdraw overhead vapor and compress it sufficiently to allow this condensing vapor to supply the heat
for the bottoms reboiler. as shown in Fig. 13-16h. The resulting liquid would be used as overhead reflux
and distillate. The other loop would withdraw vapor partway up in the rectifying section and compress it
sufficiently to allow it to supply the heat for a side reboiler. located partway down in the stripping section.
The resultant liquid, formed from the condensed vapor, would then be fed back onto the plate from which
the vapor was withdrawn. Does this modification have the potential for reducing the total compressor
work required to achieve a given degree of separation in this distillation, for operation at a specified
multiple of the minimum reflux ratio? Explain briefly.
(c) If the two compressor feeds were reversed in part (b). would the resulting scheme have a potential
for lowering the energy consumption compared with the base case? Explain briefly.
(d) Vapor recompression is often used for ethylene-ethane distillation in ethylene plants but has not
been used for demethanizer columns in such plants. Why is vapor recompression less attractive for
demethanizers?
CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES
In this chapter the logic leading to the selection of particular processes as candidates
for carrying out a particular separation is explored. Most of this book has been
concerned with the analysis or design of a given separation process once the means of
separation, the type of equipment, and the separating agent have been chosen. Very
often, however, it is not immediately clear what separation process will work best for
a mixture in a particular set of circumstances, and many important advances are
made by generating improved approaches for the separation of a mixture of practical
importance.
FACTORS INFLUENCING THE CHOICE OF A
SEPARATION PROCESS
The pertinent factors to be considered in the selection of a processing approach for
separating a particular mixture vary greatly from case to case, and it is difficult to
tabulate any reliable pattern of thought that should be followed in solving such
problems. There are a number of rules of thumb which can be followed, and with
them it should be possible to identify a few separation processes which ought to be
particularly strong candidates for use in any given problem situation. It will be
convenient to refer to Table 1-1, which lists separation processes and their underlying
physical or chemical principles and phenomena.
Feasibility
First and foremost, any separation process to be considered in a given situation must
be feasible; i.e., it must have the potential of giving the desired result. Quite a large
728
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 729
amount of screening of separation processes can be accomplished on the basis of
feasibility alone. For example, if we are confronted with the need to separate a pair of
nonionic organic compounds, such as acetone and diethyl ether, it is immediately
apparent that the process cannot be carried out by ion exchange, magnetic separa-
tion, or electrophoresis, since the physical phenomena underlying these processes are
not useful in connection with such a mixture. The molecules do not differ in those
ways. It should also be apparent from the start that these molecules do not differ
enough in surface activity for foam or bubble fractionation to be useful.
Often the question of process feasibility will have to do with the need for extreme
processing conditions. Here the dividing lines between what is extreme and what is
not extreme are not easy to draw, but the general idea is that a process which requires
very high or very low pressures or temperatures, very high voltage gradients, or other
such conditions will suffer in comparison with one which does not require extreme
conditions. For example, separation of an acetone-diethyl ether mixture by any
process which requires a solid feed, e.g., leaching, freeze-drying, or zone melting,
would require that the feed be frozen, which in turn would require low-temperature
refrigeration. If it is possible to avoid refrigeration, it will probably be desirable to do
so. As another example, separation of a mixture of sodium chloride and potassium
chloride by distillation or evaporation would require extremely high temperatures
and extremely low pressures because of the very low volatility of these substances,
and it follows that some other process will most likely work better.
Another way in which process feasibility enters into consideration occurs when a
mixture of many components is to be separated into relatively few different products.
In such a case it will be necessary for each component to enter the proper product.
Since different separation processes accomplish the separation on the basis of differ-
ent principles, it is quite possible for different processes to divide the various
components in different orders between products. As a simple example, let us
consider the separation of a mixture of propylene, H2C=CHâCH3 ; propane,
H3CâCH2âCH3; and propadiene, H2C=C=CH2. This can be an important
problem in practice (Prob. 8-L), where it may be desired to obtain the propylene in a
relatively pure product while leaving the propane and the propadiene in the other
product. In a distillation, propylene is the most volatile component, and it is possible
to take the propylene overhead in a large distillation column while removing most of
the propane and propadiene as bottoms; thus the separation could be made as
specified. In an extractive distillation process, on the other hand, a polar solvent
would be added and would serve to increase the volatility of propane while increas-
ing the volatility of the propylene less and increasing the volatility of the propadiene
still less. Propane would have to be the distillate product, while propadiene would
necessarily appear in the bottoms; hence the separation could not be performed to
give the desired product splits. Similarly, an extraction process would most likely
have to employ an immiscible solvent which was polar, thereby exerting an affinity
for propadiene (two relatively polarizable double bonds), propylene (one double
bond), and propane, in that order. Here again the propadiene cannot concentrate in
the propane product.
Another interesting practical example of this sort has been cited by Oliver (1966).
In the manufacture of various aromatic hydrocarbons it is often necessary to obtain
730 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Carbon number
(a)
Carbon number
(/'I
Carbon number
Figure 14-1 Separation factors for Ct to C12 saturates and aromatics: (a) ordinary distillation: (h)
extractive distillation: (c) extraction. (Adapted from Olirer. 1966, p. 139: used by permission.)
the aromatics (benzene, toluene, xylenes, cumenes, etc.) from a mixture of saturated,
unsaturated, and aromatic hydrocarbons of a wide range of molecular weights leav-
ing a gasoline reforming plant. Figure 14-la qualitatively shows the relative volatility
of various saturated and aromatic compounds relative to n-pentane as a function of
the number of carbon atoms in the compound. From Fig. 14-la it is apparent that
the aromatics cannot be separated from the saturates in a mixture of C5 to C12
saturates and aromatics in a single distillation column because the boiling points of
the various aromatics overlap those of the various saturates. n-Pentane and perhaps
n-hexane could be recovered as an overhead product, but the next most volatile
component would be benzene, which is an aromatic.
Figure 14-lb shows the result of adding a solvent to turn a distillation into an
extractive distillation process. The relative volatility between each saturate and its
corresponding aromatic has become greater but not quite great enough to allow the
separation of all the saturates from all the aromatics to be accomplished in a single
tower. Nonetheless, it has now become possible to cut the mixture into perhaps three
main portions through ordinary distillation and separate each of these portions by
extractive distillations in different columns. Such a process would be expensive but
workable.
A liquid-liquid extraction solvent is usually more selective than an extractive-
distillation solvent because the extraction process operates under conditions of
enough nonideality to give immiscible liquid phases, whereas the extractive-
distillation process does not. Hence the separation factors between saturates and
their corresponding aromatics shown in Fig. 14-lc are even greater than those for
extractive distillation shown in Fig. 14-lb. The extraction solvent is most likely polar
and interacts preferentially with the mobile n electrons in the benzene rings of the
aromatics. Here the entire separation can very nearly be done in a single multistage
extraction process.
For feeds of a very wide boiling range, a combination of extraction and extrac-
tive distillation could be more attractive than either process by itself. As shown in
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 731
Fig. 14-1, light saturate compounds (low molecular weight) are most easily removed
from the rest of the mixture in an extractive-distillation process, whereas heavy
saturates are most easily removed from the rest of the mixture in an extraction
process. Oliver (1966) suggests such a hybrid process whereby extraction is first used
to separate out the heavy saturates and then extractive distillation is used to separate
the remaining saturates from the aromatics.
Product Value and Process Capacity
The economic value of the products being isolated influences the choice of a separa-
tion process. Fresh water obtained from seawater has a value of about 0.025 cent per
kilogram, ethylene is worth about 25 cents per kilogram, silicone oils are worth
about $3 per kilogram, and numerous fine chemicals (vitamins, Pharmaceuticals,
etc.) have values of many dollars per kilogram. Clearly many separation processes
which would be suitable for substances with a high value cannot be considered for a
substance with a low value. The lower the economic value of the product, the more
important it will be to select a process with a relatively low energy consumption
compared with other processes and to select a process where the unit cost of any
added mass separating agent is relatively low. A small loss of a costly mass separating
agent can be an important economic penalty to a process.
A process for manufacture of a substance with a low economic worth per unit
quantity will most likely be a large-capacity process, since there will probably be a
large market for the substance and processing economies can be realized through
large-scale operation. The plant capacity can be an important factor in separation-
process selection, since some processes, e.g., chromatography, mass spectrometry,
and field-flow fractionation, are difficult to carry out on a very large scale.
Damage to Product
Often the question of avoiding damage to the product can be a major consideration
in the selection of a separation process. Artificial kidneys and lungs are cases in point,
since human blood is quite sensitive to the nature of surfaces with which it comes in
contact and can be damaged by heat or by the addition of foreign substances. As
another example, the addition of a mass separating agent in food processing is
unusual, again because of the possibility of contamination from any residual separat-
ing agent in the product. Agents which are added generally have the approval of the
Food and Drug Administration.
Often it is necessary to take special steps to avoid thermal damage to a product.
Thermal damage may be manifested through denaturation, formation of an un-
wanted color, polymerization, etc. When thermal damage is a factor in separation by
distillation, a common approach is to carry out the distillation under vacuum to keep
the reboiler temperature as low as possible. Frequently evaporators and reboilers are
given special design to minimize the holdup time at high temperature of material
passing through them.
Oxygen present in a stripping gas may be detrimental to easily oxidizable sub-
stances. Freezing can also cause irreversible damage to biological materials, although
732 SEPARATION PROCESSES
the problem is usually not as severe as that of thermal damage and can be minimized
by using well-chosen freezing conditions.
Classes of Processes
Some generalizations can be drawn between different classes of separation processes
insofar as their advantages and disadvantages for various processing applications are
concerned.
We have already met with the distinction between energy-separating-agent equi-
libration processes, mass-separating-agent equilibration processes, and rate-governed
processes. For a multistage separation without a particularly large separation factor
the energy consumption of the process increases as we go from energy separating
agent to mass separating agent to rate-governed processes. Therefore a multistage
rate-governed separation process should ordinarily give a better separation factor
than an equilibration process if the rate-governed process is to be considered, and a
mass-separating-agent process should ordinarily give a better separation factor than
an energy-separating-agent process if the mass-separating-agent process is to be
considered. The higher energy consumption of the mass-separating-agent process for
a given separation factor is associated with the introduction of yet another compon-
ent (a mixing process) and the need for removing this component from at least one of
the products. Souders (1964) has given a generalized plot of separation factors
required for extractive distillation and/or extraction to be attractive over distillation.
The necessary separation factors increase in the order distillation < extractive
distillation < extraction.
For single-stage separations the relative disadvantages of the rate-governed
processes is less, since a separating agent need not be put into more than one stage.
With the exception of some membrane processes, rate-governed separation processes
will still tend to have a large energy requirement, or a low thermodynamic efficiency,
because of their inherent dependence upon a transport phenomenon giving selective
rate differences.
Separation processes which involve handling a solid phase have a disadvantage
in continuous operation relative to processes in which all phases are fluid. This
disadvantage stems from the difficulty of handling solids in continuous flow. To
resolve this problem either more complex equipment is needed or fixed-bed
configurations are used. Fixed-bed operation is inherently not totally continuous,
and it is usually necessary to allow for intermittent bed regeneration by switching
between beds, etc. Fixed-bed processes also lose some of the benefits of continuous
countercurrent flow of contacting streams. Fixed-bed processes tend to be most
attractive when a substance present at a low concentration in the fluid phase is to be
taken up on or into the solid phase. The lower the concentration of the transferring
solute in the fluid phase, the less often it will be necessary to regenerate the bed or the
smaller the bed required. Rapid pressure-swing adsorption mitigates some of these
problems, as does the rotating-bed approach (Figs. 4-32 and 4-33): hence these
techniques have also been used with relatively concentrated mixtures on a large scale.
Another consideration which may become important is the ease of staging var-
ious types of separation processes. As we have seen, membrane separation processes
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 733
and other rate-governed processes are difficult (but by no means impossible) to stage
because of the need of adding separating agent to each stage and also because it is
frequently necessary to house each stage in a separate vessel. A distillation column,
on the other hand, can provide many stages within a single vessel. Some other
processes are best suited for those separations which require multiple staging. An
example is chromatography in any form. A chromatographic flow configuration is
not worth constructing and operating for a single-stage separation, but the cost of
providing many additional stages or transfer units in a chromatographic device is
relatively small; one simply uses a longer column. Hence chromatography finds an
application for separations where the separation factor is close enough to unity and
the purity requirements are high enough for many stages to be required. Membrane
processes, on the other hand, find greatest application for systems where they can
provide a relatively large separation factor.
The comparisons between different classes of separation processes so far lead
rather strongly toward distillation. Distillation is an energy-separating-agent equili-
bration process and hence desirable from an energy-consumption viewpoint when
staging is required. Since distillation involves no solid phases, it enjoys an advantage
relative to crystallization, which is another energy-separating-agent equilibration
process. No contaminating mass separating agent is added in distillation, and it is
easily staged within a single vessel. Because of this favorable combination of factors,
it is no accident that distillation is the most frequently used separation process in
practice, at least for large-scale petroleum-refining and heavy-chemical operations.
In fact, a sound approach to the selection of appropriate separation processes is to
begin by asking: Why not distillation? Unless there is some clear reason why distilla-
tion is not well suited, distillation will be a leading candidate. Factors most often
operating against distillation are thermal damage to the product, a separation factor
too close to unity, and the need for extreme conditions of temperature and/or pres-
sure if distillation is to be used.
Keller (1977) has evaluated the processes likely to be most seriously considered
as alternatives to distillation in the petrochemical and chemical industries, as energy
costs continue to increase. He concludes that extractive and azeotropic distillation,
extraction (including liquid-phase ion exchange), and pressure-swing adsorption are
all very likely to see markedly increased use, whereas crystallization and solid-phase
ion exchange may see some increased use and all other processes will not see much
use in these industries in the near future.
Separation Factor and Molecular Properties
For most separation processes the separation factors reflect differences in measurable
bulk, or macroscopic, properties of the species being separated. For distillation the
pertinent bulk property is the vapor pressure, as modified by activity coefficients in
solution. For extraction and absorption the pertinent bulk property is the solubility
in an immiscible liquid. These differences in bulk, or macroscopic, properties must in
turn result from differences in properties attributable to the molecules themselves,
which we shall call molecular properties. Determining the relationship of bulk proper-
ties to molecular properties is one of the frequent goals of physical and chemical
734 SEPARATION PROCESSES
research. Means of predicting various bulk properties (vapor pressure, latent heat of
vaporization, surface tension, viscosity, diffusivity, etc.) from known molecular
properties have been well summarized by Reid et al. (1977).
In addition to molecular weight the following molecular properties are impor-
tant in governing the size of separation factors attainable in various separation
processes.
Molecular volume Molecular volumes are usually taken from the molar volume of
the substance in the liquid state at the normal (1 atm) boiling point. This is a
measured quantity or can be predicted from additive contributions of atomic vol-
umes (Reid et al., 1977). Another measure of the molecular volume is the Lennard-
Jones collision diameter, obtained from measurements of gas-phase transport
properties or of virial coefficients from PKTdata (Reid et al., 1977; Bird et al., 1960).
Lennard-Jones collision diameters are available for fewer substances than molar
volumes at the normal boiling point.
Molecular shape This is a qualitative property related to the question of whether the
molecule is long and thin, nearly spherical, branched, etc. It is best judged from
molecular models constructed using known bond angles.
Dipole moment and polarizability These properties characterize the strength of inter-
molecular forces between molecules (Moore, 1963). The dipole moment is a measure
of the permanent separation of charge within a molecule, or of its polarity. Groups
like OâH and C=O in molecules are polar, in that the electrons of the bond within
the group tend to be more associated with the oxygen atom than with the other atom
of the group. When such polar groups are present in an asymmetrical fashion within
a molecule, the molecule exhibits a finite dipole moment. Polar molecules interact
more strongly with other molecules than nonpolar molecules of the same size do. As
a result a polar substance, e.g., water, has a lower vapor pressure than a nonpolar
species of about the same molecular weight, e.g., methane, and polar substances are
dissolved more readily into polar solvents. Dipole moments are tabulated by Weast
(1968) or can be predicted from known dipole-moment contributions of different
groups and a knowledge of the geometrical structure of a particular molecule
(Moore, 1963). An extreme manifestation of dipolar interaction between molecules is
hydrogen bonding between electropositive H and electronegative O, Cl, etc., atoms of
adjacent molecules. Even a molecule with no net dipole moment can act as a polar
molecule if offsetting polar groups are present locally within the molecule.
The polarizability of a substance reflects the tendency for a dipole to be induced
in a molecule of that substance due to the presence of a nearby dipolar molecule.
Polarizability depends upon the size of a molecule and the mobility of electrons in
various bonds within the molecule. Electrons in aromatic rings and, to a lesser extent,
olefinic bonds are more mobile than the electrons in single covalent bonds and
therefore impart a greater polarizability to a molecule. A more polarizable molecule
will tend to have a lower vapor pressure and will have a greater solubility in a polar
solvent. Thus diethylene glycol, a polar solvent, dissolves aromatics more readily
than paraffins and olefins and can be used to recover aromatics from a mixed-
SELECTION OK SEPARATION PROCESSES 735
hydrocarbon stream through extraction. Polarizabilities are also tabulated by Weast
(1968). The tabulated polarizability reflects what may be an average of different
polarizabilities in different directions with respect to the molecular axis.
The dielectric constant is a measure of the combined effects of the dipole moment
and the polarizability (Moore, 1963). The depth c of the potential-energy well in the
Lennard-Jones model of intermolecular forces is also a measure of the strength of
intermolecular forces between like molecules and is tabulated in several references
(Bird et al., 1960; Reid et al., 1977). Yet another measure of the degree of polarity and
the strength of intermolecular forces is the solubility parameter 6, discussed later in
this chapter.
Molecular charge Molecules can carry a net charge in liquid solution or in ionized
gases. Protein molecules contain both acidic (âCOOH) and basic (âNH2) groups
which ionize to different extents depending upon the pH of the solution in which they
are present. At a given pH different proteins will have different net charges in solu-
tion. Simple ions also differ in charge, allowing separation by processes depending
upon charge or charge-to-mass ratio.
Chemical reaction Many separations are based upon the difference between
molecules in their ability to take part in a given chemical reaction.
Table 14-1 indicates the importance of these different molecular properties in
determining the value of the separation factor for various separation processes. No
categorization such as this can be relied upon to be exact because of the numerous
exceptions which arise and because the boundaries between strong and weak
influences of a given property are often quite nebulous. Nevertheless, basic differ-
ences in the importance of different molecular properties in determining the separa-
tion factors for different separation processes are apparent from Table 14-1. For
example, the separation factor in distillation reflects vapor pressures, which in turn
reflect primarily the strength of intermolecular forces. The separation factor in
crystallization, on the other hand, reflects primarily the ability of molecules of differ-
ent kinds to fit together, and simple geometric factors of size and shape become much
more important.
Classification of separation processes in terms of the molecular properties pri-
marily governing the separation factor can be quite useful for the selection of candi-
date processes for separating any given mixture. Processes which emphasize
molecular properties in which the components differ to the greatest extent should be
given special attention. For example, if the components of a mixture have a substan-
tially different polarity from each other, the likely processes are distillation or, if the
volatilities are not very different, extraction or extractive distillation with a polar
solvent. If the more polar molecule is present in low concentration, fixed-bed adsorp-
tion with a polar adsorbent could be attractive.
Chemical Complexing
Mass-separating-agent processes offer the additional dimension of choosing the sol-
vent or other similar agent. This applies, for example, to absorption, extraction.
Table 14-1 Dependence of separation factor upon difference in molecular properties'
separating
moment and
polarizability
agent or barrier
Dipole
0
(1
3
2
2
1
3
(1
0
0
0
0
0
0
Interaction with mass
Molecular
size and
shape
0
0
1
3
2
1
1
1
0
(1
0
0
2
2
Chemical-
equilibrium
reaction
0
0
3
2
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
Molecular
charge
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1)
0
1
1
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 737
extractive and azeotropic distillation, ion exchange (both solid and liquid), adsorp-
tion, adductive crystallization, and foam and bubble processes, among others. It also
applies to membrane processes, where the interaction of the membrane or a mem-
brane component with the species to be separated determines the solubility and the
driving force for diffusion of that species across the membrane.
Physically interacting solvents are often used for absorption, extraction, and
extractive distillation; they interact with the feed mixture through van der Waals
intermolecular forces. Physically interacting solvents are usually easily regenerated
but do not exert a strong or specific selectivity between the substances to be
separated. Chemically interacting (or "complexing") solvents offer much better
selectivity in many cases and hence tend to give higher separation factors. Chemical-
complexing agents tend to be more difficult to regenerate, however.
Effective chemical-complexing solvents and other agents tend to give reaction
bond energies falling in a certain critical range. Figure 14-2 shows this range and
gives a number of examples of classes of chemical interactions with bond energies
within that range. Bond energies for chemical complexing will usually be somewhat
greater than those typical of van der Waals forces but should be substantially less
than those for covalent bonds because of the need for regeneration and avoiding
decomposition of the complexing agent itself. Some examples of currently used sep-
Likely range for
reversible chemical complexing
Van der Waals
Salting in - salting out
Acid-base interactions
Hydrogen bond
Pi bond (electrostatic)
Chelation
Clalhralion
Covalent
I 1,1,1 I I !
5 10 20 50 100 200 500
Bond energy, kJ/mol
Figure 14-2 Bond energies most suited for chemical-complexing processes. (Keller, 1977. courtesy of
Dr. Keller.)
738 SEPARATION PROCESSES
arations involving chemical-complexing agents are mineral-oil dewaxing by crystalli-
zation involving urea adduct formation, absorption of CO2 with ethanolamines. use
of a salting-out process to overcome the HCl-water azeotrope in recovery of
hydrogen chloride, and the use of cuprous ammonium acetate for extractive distilla-
tion of butadiene and butenes.
It has been noted by Keller (1977) and Mix et al. (1978) that high-cost large-scale
separations in the chemical and petrochemical industries tend to fall in certain basic
categories, i.e., more saturated and less saturated (paraffin and olefin, olefin and
diene or acetylene); mixtures of isomers: mixtures of water and polar organics; and
mixtures with overlapping boiling ranges, e.g., aromatics and nonaromatics. Com-
plexing agents that have been found effective for one separation in a category would
be logical candidates for another separation in the same category.
Some of the potential problems with chemical-complexing processes are gaining
the right degree of reaction reversibility, avoiding side reactions and instability of the
complexing agent, achieving sufficient reaction capacity for the material to be
separated, obtaining a fast enough reaction rate for stage efficiency or tower height
not to be affected too adversely, and maintaining a reasonable cost of the complexing
agent (Keller. 1977).
Experience
Development of a new separation process necessarily requires research and
laboratory-scale testing. Additional research and development will probably also be
required when a known separation process is used for a new mixture. Installation of
the first large-scale unit for separating a mixture on a commercial scale by a new
process will involve a certain amount of uncertainty in design and reliability of plant
operation. In view of these factors there is an understandable tendency for designers
to stick with the better-known separation processes or with those which have been
proved in the past for a particular application. As new processes become more
developed and have been used successfully on more occasions, they become a more
important component of the spectrum of separation processes to be considered for
new plants. However, before that point, the projected value added by a relatively
untried separation process must more than offset the costs of additional testing,
development, and uncertainty. Industrial economics tend to work out so that initial
installations of a new processing approach are more attractive on a smaller scale, and
perhaps in some quite different service, such as waste treatment.
GENERATION OF PROCESS ALTERNATIVES
The introduction of novel separation techniques can be limited by conception of the
initial idea as well as by the need for extensive development before large-scale use.
Several qualitative, systematic techniques exist for structuring one's thinking to faci-
litate conception of new processing ideas; these include morphological analysis,
functional analysis, and evolutionary techniques (King. 1974a). Morphological
analysis involves systematic generation of alternative ways of fulfilling the various
functions which must be included in any process for the goal desired and then
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 739
looking at all combinations of those alternatives. An example is given in the discus-
sion of fruit-juice concentration and dehydration, below. For separations, it is helpful
to think of new property differences on which separations can be based, as well as
new flow configurations and types of equipment internals. In many cases innovations
which have been made in one type of process can be carried over to quite different
classes of processes through a form of technology transfer.
Rochelle and King (1978; see also Rochelle, 1977) explore the use of morphologi-
cal analysis, technology transfer, and evolutionary techniques to generate new pos-
sibilities for desulfurization of flue gases from fossil-fuel-fired power plants.
ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
In this section we consider two important separation problems, with the aim of
identifying the important characteristics of the separation problem and determining
the differences between the molecules to be separated which led to the choice of
particular separation processes as most suitable for that application. The examples
are chosen to be quite different from each other. They are typical of other separation
problems except that distillation plays a less prominent role than it ordinarily would.
Separations for which distillation has drawbacks have been chosen in order to bring a
wide variety of processes into consideration.
Separation of Xylene Isomers
Xylenes are dimethylbenzenes and exist as three distinct isomers, depending upon the
relative positions of the methyl groups on the aromatic ring:
CH3 CH3
CH3
Meta
Ortho
As shown in Fig. 1-8, the xylenes are obtained commercially from the mixed hydro-
carbon stream manufactured in naphtha reforming units in oil refineries. There is
also some (but much less) production from coke-oven gas in steel mills. p-Xylene
production in 1977 was estimated to be about 1.6 x 109 kg/year in the United States
(Debreczeni, 1977), with an approximate value of 29 cents per kilogram (Chem.
Mark. Rep., 1977). p-Xylene is used as a raw material for the manufacture of tere-
phthalic acid and dimethyl terephthalate, both used to manufacture polyester
synthetic fibers:
H-O
O-H H3C-O
0-CH3
Terephthalic acid
Dimethyl terephthalate
740 SEPARATION PROCESSES
o-Xylene was produced to the extent of about 5.5 x 108 kg/year in the United
States in 1977, with a value of about 25 cents per kilogram. It is used as a raw
material for the manufacture of phthalic anhydride.
which is used in turn for the manufacture of dioctyl phthalate and other phthalates,
which are used as plasticizers for polyvinyl chloride. Plasticizers are incorporated into
polyvinyl chloride goods in order to impart flexibility and elasticity. Phthalic anhy-
dride is also made from naphthalene. m-Xylene is almost entirely used for gasoline
blending and conversion into the other isomers through isomerization, although
some uses for petrochemical production are being explored.
p-Xylene has the greatest demand in relation to the availability of the various
isomers from refinery streams. o-Xylene is a relatively pure side product from the
purification of p-xylene. Since its production along with p-xylene exceeds the current
demand for o-xylene, some o-xylene is returned to gasoline blending. There is a rapid
growth in the demand for p- and o-xylenes, since they are so central to the plastics
industry (Debreczeni, 1977).
Various properties of the three xylene isomers and of ethylbenzene,
CH2CH3
which is also an isomer of the xylenes, are shown in Table 14-2. The free energies of
formation of the various isomers are such that m-xylene is the most abundant isomer
Table 14-2 Properties of xylenes and ethylbenzenet
o-Xylene m-Xylene />-Xylene Elhylbenzene
Amount in equilibrium mixture
at 1000 K. "â 23 43 19 15
Boiling point. K 417.3 412.6 411.8 409.6
Free/ing point. K 248.1 225.4 286.6 178.4
Change in boiling point with
change in pressure. 10 ~* K Pa
Dipole moment, 10 "C/molecule
Polarizability, 10 31 m3
Dielectric constant
Surface tension at 293 K. mJ m2
Molecular weight
Density at 293 K. Mg m3
Density at critical point. Mg m3
Latent heat of vaporization
at boiling point. kJ kg 347 343 340 339
3.73
3.68
3.69
3.68
2.1
1.2
0
141
141.8
142
2.26
2.24
2.23
2.24
30.03
28.63
28.31
29.04
106.16
106.16
106.16
106.16
0.8802
0.8642
0.8610
0.8670
0.28
0.27
0.29
0.29
+ Data from " Handbook of Chemistry and Physics." " Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology."
'Chemical Engineers' Handbook," and Landoll-Bornstein.
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 741
in the equilibrium mixture. Since the species are isomers of each other, they have
identical molecular weights, and hence any separation process dependent upon
molecular-weight differences for the separation factor will fail. The three xylene
isomers do differ somewhat in polarity because the bond between the methyl group
and the aromatic ring is somewhat polar. In p-xylene these two dipolar bonds oppose
each other and the net dipole moment is zero. In o-xylene the dipolar bonds are
aligned in nearly the same direction and the net dipole moment is greatest. Even
though there is a difference in dipole moments, it is not great (the dipole moment of
phenol is 4.8 x 10" 28 C, for example). The strength of intermolecular forces between
the various xylene isomers does not vary greatly, as indicated by the very similar
dielectric constants. Hence processes dependent upon differences in intermolecular
forces can be expected to provide separation factors close to unity, although it may
be possible to make some use of the difference in dipole moments.
The boiling points are quite close together. From the boiling points and the
changes in boiling points with respect to pressure it can be computed that the relative
volatility of m- or p-xylene to o-xylene is about 1.16, whereas the relative volatility of
p-xylene to m-xylene is 1.02. The ortho isomer is different enough in volatility for a
separation of o-xylene from wi-xylene by distillation to be practicable, although a
reflux ratio of 15 to 1 and 100 or more plates are required to accomplish the distilla-
tion. The difference in volatilities between the ortho isomer and the other isomers in
this case is a reflection of the difference in dipole moments; the higher dipole moment
of o-xylene causes some preferential alignment of the molecules in the liquid phase
and reduces the volatility somewhat in comparison with the other two isomers.
Figure 14-3 shows a xylene splitter distillation column used to separate o-xylene from
the other isomers.
The relative volatility between p- and m-xylene is so slight that separation by
distillation is out of the question. Considering the headings of the different molecular
property columns in Table 14-1, it is apparent that the only property in which the
two isomers differ is the molecular shape. p-Xylene is a narrow molecule, with the
methyl groups at either end. m-Xylene is more nearly spherical because of the posi-
tion of the methyl groups. The separation process most dependent upon molecular
shape at a fixed molecular volume is crystallization. The difference in molecular
shapes has two effects: (1) p-xylene molecules can stack together more readily into a
crystal structure because of their symmetrical shape, and as a result p-xylene has a
much higher freezing point (286.6 K)than any of the other isomers; (2) the difference
in shape between p- and m-xylene means that m-xylene molecules cannot fit easily
into the p-xylene crystal structure in the solid phase. As a result, the solid phase
formed by partial freezing of a mixture of the two isomers contains essentially pure
p-xylene, and the separation factor for a crystallization process is very high indeed.
Crystallization has classically been the most common method for separating
p-xylene from m-xylene commercially, following removal of o-xylene by distillation.
A number of different crystallization processes and plants for p-xylene manufacture
have been described (Anon., 1955; Findlay and Weedman, 1958; Anon., 1963;
McKay et al., 1966; Brennan, 1966: Anon., 1968).
The phase diagram for binary p-xylene-m-xylene mixtures is shown in Fig. 14-4.
The eutectic compositions in a ternary mixture of all three xylene isomers are shown
742 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Figure 14-3 A xylene splitter column at the
Richmond. California, refinery of Standard Oil
Company of California. This column takes m-
and p-xylenes as distillate and o-xylene as
bottoms. Notice the large size compared with
other columns. (Chevron Research Company.
Richmond. California.)
in Fig. 14-5. For the binary system the eutectic contains 13 percent p-xylene and
freezes at 221 K. Figure 14-5 shows the phases which exist in equilibrium during
partial freezing of mixtures of various compositions. The ternary eutectic (minimum-
freezing) mixture occurs at 30.5°,, ortho. 61.4",, meta. and 8.1 "â para and freezes at
208 K. Until a binary eutectic line is reached, the solid phase consists of a pure
isomer. No solid solutions are formed.
The presence of the eutectic makes it difficult to recover a high fraction of the
entering p-xylene in a crystallization process. If the o-xylene is removed from the
high-temperature equilibrium mixture of isomers and the ethylbenzene is removed or
was absent in the first place, the resulting binary mixture of p- and m-xylene contains
31°0p-xylene. Since the binary eutectic contains 13",,p-xylene, the maximum percen-
tage of the p-xylene in the feed which can be frozen out before the eutectic starts to
form can be calculated as
0.87 - 0.69
0.87(0.31)
= 67",
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 743
290
280
270
260
7. K
250
240
230
220
Solution
Solid mixed xylenes
iIiIi
20 40 60 80
KM)
Figure 14-4 Phasediagram for p-xylene-
m-xylene system. (Data from Egan and
Luthy, 1955.)
p-Xylene. mole perceni
Pure o-xvlene
Pure m-xylene l
0
Solution + solid o-xylene
Solution + solid m-xylenc
!,I,I
Pure p-xylene
20 40 60 80
p-Xylene. percent
Figure 14-5 Ternary eutectic diagram for mixed xylenes. (Data from Pit:er and Scon, 1943.)
744 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Because of the need for avoiding too close an approach to the eutectic and because of
incomplete physical separation of the crystals from the supernatant liquid, the re-
covery of p-xylene will in reality be less.
Since the separation of xylene isomers by crystallization provides such a high
separation factor, and since molecular shape is the only substantial difference be-
tween the isomers, most efforts for increasing p-xylene recovery until recently have
involved improvements on the basic crystallization process. The most common
modification has involved recycle of the supernatant residual xylenes to a catalytic
isomerization reactor operating at 640 to 780 K (Brennan, 1966; Prescott, 1968). In
the isomerization reactor there is a net conversion of m-xylene into p-xylene. If
o-xylene is also recycled to the isomerization reactor and the crystallization step is
repeated, an essentially complete conversion of the mixed-xylenes feed to a p-xylene
product is possible. A flow diagram of a combined crystallization-isomerization
process (Prescott, 1968) is shown in Fig. 14-6.
Referring again to Table 14-1, we see that another way to take advantage of
differences in molecular shape is through partial solidification processes involving
interaction with an appropriate mass separating agent. An example is the process of
clathration, which has been investigated for the separation of xylene isomers (Schaef-
fer and Dorsey, 1962; Schaeffer et al., 1963). It has been found (Schaeffer and Dorsey,
1962) that nickel[(4-methylpyridine)4(SCN)2] selectively clathrates p-xylene, giving
a recovery of 92 percent of the p-xylene in a 64 percent pure product in a single-stage
Recycle isomerized xylenes
Feed
p-Xylene
product
(mixed xylenes) <
(99 ' '7, p-xylcne)
5"n Elhylhenzene
Benzene, toluene.
23°; p-xylene
50°; m-xylcnc
22°; o-xylene
light gases
Mixed xylenes j
(9°; p-xylene) II ^.
"â¢V
X
V
S
i
E
T
N
A
E
B
ISOMtRl/ATION
1
C
I.
p
Z
1
E
T
R
T
E
R
^
o-Xylene product
(as desired)
^
T
Figure 14-* Process for p-xylene manufacture by crystallization and isomerization.
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 745
process. The expense of the clathrating agent has discouraged application of such a
process. Another crystallization process involving addition of a mass separating
agent is adductive crystallization, in which a substance is added which will form a
solid compound preferentially with one of the species being separated (clathration
can be considered a special case of adductive crystallization). Egan and Luthy (1955)
have found that carbon tetrachloride will form a stoichiometric compound with
p-xylene (CC14 ⢠p-xylene). If CC14 is added to the binary p-xylene-m-xylene eutectic
in such a proportion as to give a solution containing 54% CC14, 6% p-xylene, and
40% m-xylene, the mixture will begin to freeze at 233 K and will deposit crystals of
the CC14 ⢠p-xylene compound until reaching a eutectic freezing at 197 K and con-
taining 54% CC14, 45% m-xylene, and 1% p-xylene. Thus a greater recovery of
p-xylene in the crystallization step is possible at the expense of lower refrigeration
temperatures and an additional step separating p-xylene from CC14. It has also been
found that antimony trichloride will form a crystal preferentially with p-xylene
(Meek, 1961).
Yet another approach for modifying crystallization through addition of a mass
separating agent is extractive crystallization, in which a third component is added to
alter the position of the binary eutectic without actually taking part in the solid
phase. Findlay and Weedman (1958) describe how n-pentane can be added to a
mixture of the p- and m-xylene isomers to shift the eutectic point. Subsequent remo-
val of n-pentane restores the binary eutectic, and it is possible to achieve a complete
separation by combining a crystallization with pentane and a crystallization without
pentane into one process.
As noted in Table 14-1, it is also possible to generate a separation factor based on
differences in molecular shape in membrane separation processes. Choo (1962) re-
ports separation factors on the order of 2.0 for p-xylene over o-xylene and on the
order of 1.3 for p-xylene over m-xylene for preferential passage through a low-density
polyethylene membrane. Membrane separation processes have a disadvantage when
applied to xylene mixtures, however, because of the difficulty of staging rate-
governed processes and because of complications needed in order to provide a
driving force which will cause p-xylene to cross the membrane (Michaels et al.. 1967;
see also Prob. 14-J).
Because of the lack of a marked difference in dipole moments and polarizabilities
between xylene isomers, separations dependent upon the addition of a physically
interacting solvent to modify vapor-liquid or liquid-liquid equilibria have not been
particularly useful. For example, Wilkinson and Berg (1964) examined 40 different
entrainers for azeotropic distillation and found that the best relative volatility be-
tween p- and m-xylene was 1.029, compared with 1.019 in the absence of any
entrainer.
Since adsorption processes are more influenced by molecular-shape factors
(Table 14-1), one would expect adsorption using a well-designed adsorbent to give a
better separation factor for xylene isomers than can be obtained with physically
interacting liquid solvents. Certain types of synthetic zeolites (molecular sieves) have
been found particularly effective for this purpose (Anon., 1971; Broughton, 1977)
because of the controlling effect of sizes and shapes of internal apertures on their
adsorption properties. This discovery has been coupled with the development of
746 SEPARATION PROCESSES
improved means of approaching a continuous-flow adsorption process on a large
scale (Broughton, 1977; Otani, 1973; see also Fig. 4-33). Over a period ofless than 10
years the result has been at least 22 new industrial xylene-separation units (as of
1978) based upon molecular-sieve technology (Broughton, 1977). Thus adsorption is
assuming much of the role formerly played by crystallization.
The only other successful approach to the separation of the xylene isomers has
been to take advantage of differences in the ability of different isomers to take part in
certain chemical reactions. These differences in reactivity are associated with steric
effects resulting from the different relative positions of the methyl groups on the
aromatic ring in the three isomers. A common organic-chemistry laboratory
technique for separating the three isomers involves sulfonation with H2SO4 (Whit-
more, 1951). In cold, concentrated sulfuric acid the ortho and meta isomers are
sulfonated while the para isomer is unchanged. The sulfuric acid solution of the ortho
and meta isomers is treated with BaCO3 and Na2CO3 to eliminate excess H2SO4
and form the sodium salts of the sulfonates. The resulting solution is subjected to
evaporative crystallization, whereupon the o-xylene sodium sulfonate compound
precipitates first. The separation comes from the fact that the order of preferential
sulfonation and the order of hydrolyzing tendency of the sulfonic acids both are
meta > ortho > para. Several patents suggesting commercial processes have been
based upon this behavior (Meek, 1961), but there has been no large-scale installation,
most likely because of the need for consumption of expensive reactant chemicals or
for elaborate reprocessing to recover them.
A more successful approach to chemical separation of the isomers involves
reversible chemical complexing (Fig. 14-2). All three isomers react rapidly and
reversibly with a mixture of hydrogen fluoride. HF, and boron trifluoride, BF3, to
form complexes (Meek, 1961). The relative stabilities of the complexes favor the form
with m-xylene. The xylene complexes with HF-BF3 are soluble in excess HF, but the
unreacted xylenes are not; this leads to an extraction process based on immiscible
phases. Figure 14-7 shows a flow diagram of a process using this behavior (Davis,
1971). m-Xylene is preferentially extracted into HF-BF3. A nearly complete separ-
ation of the m-xylene from the other isomers is obtained by countercurrent staging.
Since the m-xylene is removed at this point, p-xylene can be recovered and separated
from ethylbenzene and o-xylene in a series of distillation steps, thereby avoiding a
low-temperature crystallization process. The m-xylene complex with HF-BF3 can be
decomposed upon heating; hence decomposition of a portion of the extract from the
extraction column gives a quite pure m-xylene product. The HF-BF3 mixture also
serves as a low-temperature isomerization catalyst. The remaining extract passes
through an isomerization reactor, following which the HF-BF3 is removed by de-
composition from the isomerized xylenes. The recycle isomerized xylene stream is
smaller than in the crystallization-plus-isomerization process because no p-xylene is
fed to the isomerization reactor.
Saito et al. (1971) describe another chemical approach, based upon preferential
trans alkylation of m-xylene with t-butylbenzene. catalyzed by A1C13 and carried out
in a distillation column. The trans alkylation reaction produces benzene and f-butyl-
3,5-dimethylbenzene. Conversion is promoted by driving off benzene in the distilla-
tion, while regeneration is accomplished by adding benzene to reverse the reaction.
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 747
Ethylbenzene
Mixed xylenes (-cO.O.V^ m-xylcne)
X
Feed
mixed xylenes
Recycle
isomerized
xylenes
HF-BF,
Oto 10 C
HF-BF, recycle
ISOMERIZATION
11 m-Xylene (99.5T, purity)
p-Xylene
X
D
i
s
i
i
i
L
A
r
i
0
N
o-Xylene
Figure 14-7 Japan Gas Chemical Co. process for xylene separation by HF-BF3 extraction.
Concentration and Dehydration of Fruit Juices
Concentrated fruit juices are produced in very large quantity. In the United States
the consumption of reconstituted juice concentrates is more than 4 x 109 kg/year
equivalent of fresh juice (Tressler and Joslyn, 1971). This is greater than the produc-
tion of p-xylene, which is one of the largest-volume petrochemicals.
There are two main advantages to concentration of fruit juices by removing
between 60 and 99.5 percent of the water present: (1) a great economy in transporta-
tion and storage costs resulting from simple reduction in the volume and weight of
the juice and (2) juice stability; a concentrated juice is more resistant to degradation
of various kinds during storage than fresh juice under similar conditions.
A concentrated juice is reconstituted by the addition of cold water in the proper
amount. Since the aim of juice concentration is to provide a reconstituted product
that tastes and appears as much as possible like the original fresh juice, a juice-
concentration process should remove water selectively. Ideally, components other
748 SEPARATION PROCESSES
than water should not be lost from the concentrate during processing, and no com-
ponent should undergo chemical or biochemical change. This is a difficult goal to
meet, in view of the fact that fruit juices are complex mixtures containing many
substances.
Apple juice, for example, contains about 14 weight percent dissolved substances
in the fresh juice (Tressler and Joslyn, 1971). The most prominent dissolved species
are sugars; apple juice contains 4 to 8"0 levulose, 1 to 2",, dextrose, and 2 to 4°0
sucrose. Also present in apple juice are malic acid and lesser amounts of other acids,
along with tannins, pectins, enzymes, and other substances. The taste and aroma of a
juice reflect the synergistic contributions of a vast number of volatile compounds
present in the juice, which have been identified in the vapor given off by apple juice
through flame-ionization gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, and other
techniques (Flath et al., 1967).
Orange juice contains about 12 percent dissolved substances and about 0.5
percent suspended material; 5 to 10 percent sugars are present (Tressler and Joslyn,
1971). Sucrose is the most prominent sugar, levulose and dextrose being present to
lesser extents. The most prominent acid is citric acid (about 1 percent). Numerous
other nonvolatile components are present (pectins, glycosides, pentosans, proteins,
etc.), along with a large number of volatile compounds. Table 14-3 lists some of the
volatile components which have been identified in the equilibrium vapor over orange
juice (Wolford et al., 1963). d-Limonene is the one compound which has been most
directly related to characteristic orange aroma, although the other compounds
marked with a dagger in Table 14-3 also have been shown to be prominent and
important. Several hundred compounds have been identified in all.
The most common process for fruit-juice concentration is evaporation. Since the
sugars and other heavier dissolved solids are all much less volatile than water,
evaporation was a logical choice. It is a well-known and well-developed process and
simple to carry out. Steam costs have always been reduced in practice through the
use of multieffect evaporation. Despite the fact that evaporation is far and away the
most common process, it has several problems:
1. Fruit juices have substantial thermal sensitivity and develop ofT-flavor and/or off-color
when held at too high a temperature for too long a time. Ponting et al. (1964) indicate that
most berry and fruit juices can be kept 2 or 3 h at 328 K without detectable flavor change.
At higher temperatures the time is much less, typically under 1 min at 367 K and about 1 s
at 389 K. Vitamin C in citrus juices is similarly heat-sensitive.
2. Again because of the thermal sensitivity of juices, there is a strong tendency toward fouling
of heat-transfer surfaces (buildup of a semisolid layer next to the surface) in evaporators.
This fouling reduces the heat-transfer coefficient across the evaporator surface and accentu-
ates tendencies toward off-flavor because of the long residence time of the fouling layer.
3. The volatile flavor and aroma compounds escape readily from the juice during evaporation,
causing a flat lifeless taste.
Approaches to dealing with these problems have followed two paths: improvement
of evaporation processes and development of other kinds of separation processes.
Considering improvement of evaporation processes first, the most obvious
approach toward overcoming the problem of too high a temperature for too long a
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 749
Table 14-3 Compounds present in the equilibrium vapor above Florida
orange juice (data from Wolford et a I,, 1963)
Acetaldehyde
Ethyl n-caprylate
Methyl heptenol
2-Octenal
Acetone
Ethyl formate
Methyl isovalerate
n-Octyl butyrate
n-Amylol
Geranial
Methyl-n-methyl
ii-Octyl isovalerate
A3-Carene
Geraniol
anthranilate
a-Pinenet
frans-Carveol
n-Hexanal
0-Myrcenet
1-Propanol
/-Carvonet
2-Hexanal
Neral
z-Terpineol
Citronellol
n-Hexanol
Nerol
Terpinen-4-ol
p-Cymene
2-Hexenal
/i-Nonanal
a-Terpinene
n-Decanal
3-Hexenol
1-Nonanol
y-Terpinene
Ethanol
d-Limonenet
2-Nonanol
Terpinolene
Ethyl acetate
Linaloolt
n-Octanalt
Terpinyl acetate
Ethyl butyrate
Methanol
M-Octanolt
n-Undecanal
t Proved to be closely associated with characteristic flavor.
time is vacuum evaporation. When the evaporation is carried out under reduced
pressure, the boiling point of the juice occurs at a lower temperature and there is less
thermal degradation. Another approach is to reduce the residence time of the juice in
the evaporator as much as possible and to make the residence time of different
elements of juice as uniform as possible. For this purpose a high heat-transfer
surface-to-volume ratio is required, along with high heat-transfer coefficients and an
avoidance of pockets or corners giving a long residence time for some of the juice.
Turbulent flow in low-diameter tubes gives a relatively uniform velocity distribution
and a high rate of heat transfer into the juice, keeping the residence time small
(Eskew et al., 1951). In such an evaporator, condensing steam outside the tubes
supplies the heat for evaporation. Another way to obtain rapid heating and mini-
mum residence time is to preheat the juice by direct injection of steam (Brown et al.,
1951). The steam for this purpose must be clean, however. Rapid heating in evapora-
tors can give conditions approaching those which are needed in any event for pas-
teurization (Tressler and Joslyn, 1971; Brown et al., 1951).
The fouling problem can be minimized by clever evaporator design. A number of
different approaches are discussed by Armerding (1966) and Morgan (1967). Carroll
et al. (1966) have suggested radio-frequency heating as a means of avoiding heat-
750 SEPARATION PROCESSES
The first of these approaches involves overconcentrating the juice before the cutback
is added and necessarily gives a product which contains the volatile compounds
perhaps to 10 percent, at most, of their natural level in the fresh juice. Nevertheless, a
little bit of retained volatile flavor has a substantial effect on the attractiveness of the
juice, and this approach has been successfully used. The second approach of obtain-
ing flavoring material from peels, cores, etc., has been most successful for citrus
juices; however, it is known that the flavoring material in peels differs in distinguish-
able respects from the natural juice flavor.
The volatile flavor components generally have a volatility greater than that of
water (Bomben et al., 1973). Many of the compounds listed in Table 14-3 have
boiling points higher than that of water, but they are sufficiently unlike water for
their activity coefficients at high dilution in water solution to be very large. Thus for
essentially all these compounds the product of the activity coefficient and the pure-
component vapor pressure is substantially greater than the vapor pressure of water,
and the relative volatility of the compound compared with that of water is much
greater than unity. Consequently it is not surprising that distillation is the most
common and best-developed method for separating the volatile flavor and aroma
species from water vapor. Such distillation processes are called essence-recovery
processes (Walker, 1961).
A flow diagram of an essence-recovery process (Bomben et al.. 1966) is shown in
Figure 14-8. Depending upon the degree of volatility of the most important flavor
components, it may be possible to treat only the first portion of the vapor generated
to recover the volatile compounds. In apple-juice processing, for example, the flavor
species are sufficiently volatile to be located almost exclusively in the first 10 to 20
percent of the vapor generated. This vapor is fed to a distillation column with a long
stripping section, which is present to provide a high recovery of the volatile com-
pounds. The column is operated under vacuum to minimize thermal damage to the
flavor compounds. The overhead liquid aroma-solution product contains only 0.5 to
1.0 percent of the water vapor which entered the column and may typically contain
about half of the original amount of flavor species. Essence recovery is relatively
successful, but it adds another separation process to the overall juice-concentration
process and means an appreciable increase in steam requirements for a juice-
concentration process (see Prob. 5-1). Also, in some cases, e.g., coffee extract, con-
centrated essences become chemically unstable, which can result in off-flavors.
We next turn to the question of alternative or supplementary processes to evap-
oration. One degree of freedom is the fraction of the total water removed. Eva-
porated concentrates are typically reduced in volume by a factor of 3 or 4, but any
degree of concentration is, in principle, possible, ranging from less than this up to
nearly complete dryness. A three- or four-fold concentrate must be kept at freezer
temperatures for stability during storage. A greater extent of water removal would
allow storage under less severe conditions. Efforts to market a liquid concentrate
with a greater degree of water removal have been hampered by the difficulty of
reconstitution resulting from the high viscosity of the product. Production and mar-
keting of a fully dried natural juice product has been held back by the stickiness and
hygroscopicity of the powder; however, dry juice powders are currently made on a
small-scale and specialty basis.
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 751
Stripped juice
to cooler and
DRY ICE
TRAP
»⢠Vent gas
to atmosphere
CIRCULATING
PUMP
To waste
COLUMN
BOTTOM
PUMP
Figure 14-8 Schematic diagram of an essence-recovery process. (Western Utilization Research and
Development Division, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, Albany, California.)
More possibilities for alternative water-removal processes can be generated by a
form of morphological analysis (King, 1974a,/>). Even though water is the major
component in a fruit juice, it makes sense for a separation process to remove the
water from the juice solutes. It is very unlikely that the alternative approach of
removing everything else from the water could be sufficiently selective. If water is to
be removed from the feed mixture, it is necessary that the water product be another
phase, immiscible with the feed (equilibration processes) or that it be separated from
the feed by a barrier (rate-governed processes). In either case, the chemical potential
or activity of water in this product must be lower than that in the feed juice for
transport of water into the second phase or across the barrier to take place. Different
processes can be generated by considering different feed and product phases and
different ways of creating the necessary chemical-potential difference.
Table 14-4 shows the processing alternatives which can be generated in this way.
For equilibration processes, if the feed remains liquid and the water product is to be
vapor, the necessary chemical-potential difference can be achieved by lowering the
pressure of the water-vapor product, by increasing the temperature of the feed above
752 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Table 14-4 Morphological generation of alternative processes for concentration and/or
dehydration of fruit juices
Initial
Receiving
Means of creating
phase of
phase
chemical-potential
water
for water
difference
Example
A. Equilibration processes
Liquid
Solid
Vapor
Immiscible liquid
Solid
Vapor
Immiscible liquid
Pressure (vacuum)
Temperature (feed superheat)
Composition (carrier)
Composition (solvent)
Temperature (freeze)
Composition (precipitate)
Composition (adsorb)
Pressure (vacuum)
Composition (carrier)
Composition (solvent)
Flash evaporation
Drying with superheated
steam
Air drying
Extraction
Freeze concentration
Clathration
Solid desiccant
Ordinary freeze-drying
Carrier-gas freeze-drying
B. Rate-governed processes
Liquid Vapor Pressure (vacuum)
Pervaporation with
compression
Temperature (feed superheat)
Composition (carrier)
Pervaporation with
carrier
Liquid Pressure (pressurize feed)
Composition (added solute)
Composition (solvent)
Reverse osmosis
Direct osmosis
Perstraction
C. Mechanical processes
Liquid Screening
Density difference
Pulp removal
Centrifugation before
evaporation
Solid Screening
Density difference
Grinding and screening
for frozen juices
Grinding and flotation
in liquid of
intermediate density,
for frozen juices
Source: Adapted from King, 1974a. p. 21; used by permission.
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 753
immiscible liquid, it is difficult to create the chemical-potential difference through
changes in temperature and pressure. One is then left with the use of a solvent to alter
composition in the receiving phase, and this then leads to solvent extraction of water
from the juice. If the water is to enter a solid phase, the most obvious approach is to
lower the temperature and partially freeze the juice, but the morphological approach
also suggests solidifying water through a composition effect, such as by adsorption of
water onto a desiccant or by clathration. Achieving solidification by pressure change
is difficult because the freezing point of water is relatively insensitive to pressure.
Alternatively, the feed can be converted into the solid phase by freezing the juice.
With a vapor product, this leads to various forms of freeze-drying, where the water is
removed by sublimation.
Similar alternatives exist for rate-governed processes. A process in which water
(or some other substance) is vaporized across a selective membrane is known as
pervaporation. One design complication in such processes is the need to supply the
latent heat of vaporization to all portions of the membrane; this has held such
processes back from commercial implementation (Michaels et al., 1967). Reverse
osmosis is a rate-governed process with a liquid-water product, where the chemical-
potential difference is created by raising the pressure of the feed stream enough to
raise the chemical potential of water above that on the product-water side. The
morphological analysis suggests that a membrane process with a liquid-water pro-
duct can also be carried out by generating a temperature difference across the mem-
brane or by adding a solute or miscible solvent on the product-water side in an
amount great enough to diminish the chemical potential of water in that product
below the chemical potential in the feed stream. The first of these possibilities is
probably impractical because of the very large dissipation of heat, but the second
alternative has received some attention. It is similar to dialysis and has also been
called perstraction (Michaels et al., 1967). Since rate-governed processes with a solid
feed seem impractical because of low transport rates in the solid phase, they have not
been included in Table 14-4.
Juices like those from citrus fruits contain suspended matter. This leads to the
possibility of separating pulp and/or "cloud" from serum first by a mechanical
process and then being able to concentrate the serum under more severe conditions
(Peleg and Mannheim, 1970). Alternatively, freezing gives a separation of ice crystals
and residual amorphous concentrate on the microscale. Fine grinding can then lead
to individual particles of ice and concentrate. Means of separating these from each
other have been explored by Spiess et al. (1973).
Expanding the possibilities for rate-governed processes still further, Table 14-5
lists some of the potentially useful barriers. Especially interesting is the selective
action which can be exerted by a dynamically formed surface layer. Particularly with
carbohydrate solutions, such as juices, it has been found that achieving a surface
layer of relatively low water content will serve to reduce greatly the diffusion of
volatile flavor components, relative to diffusion of water, through that layer (Ment-
ing et al., 1970; Chandrasekaran and King, 1972). Thus once such a surface layer is
formed, volatiles loss is greatly reduced, even if the subsurface material still has a
high water content. Another example of using a different sort of selective membrane
is osmotic dewatering of fruit pieces, where the fruit is placed in a solute-containing
754 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Table 14-5 Barriers potentially useful for rate-governed de-
watering processes
Filter media with extremely fine micropores:
Ultrafiltration membranes
Cellulose filters
Irradiated polycarbonate filters
Membranes:
Synthetic polymeric membranes (cellulose acetate, polyamide. etc.)
Natural cell walls
Surface layers:
Natural layers (skins, etc.)
Dynamically formed surface layers of low water content
Added surfactants forming a condensed surface phase
Source: Adapted from King, 1974a, p. 22: used by permission.
bath and water passes out selectively through natural cell walls (Farkas and Lazar.
1969; etc.).
It is instructive to compare the processes generated in Table 14-4 on the basis of
selectivity of water removal. The vaporization equilibration processes suffer from the
problem of volatiles loss. As already pointed out, this problem can be alleviated if a
vaporization process can be carried out so that a layer of low water content forms
rapidly at the surface of drying drops or particles. It turns out that freeze-drying has
this property because of the prior concentration accomplished during the freezing
step before drying (King. 1971). Also, volatiles retention in any evaporative drying
process is promoted by lower water contents in the feed to the dryer; thus prior water
removal by any aroma-retentive means is beneficial for lessening volatiles loss during
a subsequent drying step. Among the nonvaporization processes, solvent extraction
also runs the risk of volatiles loss, since the solvent will probably preferentially
dissolve the organic volatile compounds. Here again, it has been found that rapid
extraction of dispersed droplets will form a droplet surface layer of low water
content, which is aroma-retentive (Kerkhof and Thijssen, 1974). However, like any
mass-separating-agent process using a solvent, extraction runs the risk of contamina-
tion of the juice with residual solvent unless the solvent is food-compatible or can
somehow be removed fully without detrimental solvent loss. Imposing a selective
membrane can reduce solvent contamination and leads to perstraction as a rate-
governed process. Membrane selectivities for water removal in reverse osmosis have
been investigated by Merson and Morgan (1968) and by Feberwee and Evers (1970).
using cellulose-acetate membranes. There is a substantial loss of low-molecular-
weight polar organics, such as esters and aldehydes. For apple juice, where such
compounds are predominant, the volatiles loss with the water permeate is marked,
but for orange juice, which contains mainly terpenes (Table 14-3), the loss is much
less.
Freezing gives the most selective removal of water at equilibrium. This is one of
the benefits of the prior freezing step for freeze drying. It also leads to freeze-
concentration (partial freezing, followed by settling, filtration, or centrifugation of ice
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 755
crystals) as an attractive concentration process (Heiss and Schachinger, 1951;
Muller, 1967). Although it is not yet used on a large scale for juices, freeze-
concentration has found extensive use as a means of concentrating coffee extract
before freeze-drying to give a highly aroma-retentive product. However, freeze-
concentration must be carried out by indirect cooling; direct contact with a volatile
refrigerant or cooling through vaporization of water (Prob. 13-E) would lead to a
loss of volatiles.
Low operating temperatures also give an advantage to freeze-concentration,
freeze-drying, other vacuum-drying processes, and membrane processes from the
standpoint of minimizing thermal degradation of flavor, color, and nutrient content.
However, at these lower temperatures concentrated juices become quite viscous. In
reverse osmosis, this high viscosity results in low mass-transfer coefficients and there-
by raises severe problems of concentration polarization, wherein the liquid adjacent
to the membrane surface develops a much higher solute concentration than the bulk
liquid. The high concentrate viscosity also makes it very difficult to wash residual
concentrate from the ice crystals in freeze concentration. Compounding this problem
is the fact that the ice crystals tend to be very small. A pulsed, pressurized wash
column is one way of coping with this problem (Vorstmann and Thijssen, 1972).
Even a small amount of entrained concentrate can be highly detrimental econo-
mically because of the substantial product value. This point is illustrated in Examples
3-1 and 3-2.
Huang et al. (1965-1966) and Werezak (1969) have explored the use of hydrate
formation, or clathration, to achieve formation of a solid phase at a higher tem-
perature and hence with a lower solution viscosity. Methyl bromide,
trichlorofluoromethane, 1,1-difluoroethane, ethylene oxide, and sulfur dioxide have
been among the clathrating agents studied. Werezak (1969) has found that a clathra-
tion process can form larger crystals than a freezing process in some instances, but
the situation is usually the other way around, most likely because of slow mass
transfer of the hydrating agent through the aqueous phase to the growing crystals,
due to its low solubility. A clathration process involves addition of a mass separating
agent, which must not be toxic and which must be removed as completely as possible
from the juice concentrate product. It would be difficult to remove the clathrating
agent from the concentrate without substantial loss of volatile flavor and aroma
components.
Among processes for full dehydration of fruit juices, spray-drying has been
plagued by the stickiness problem, volatiles loss, and thermal degradation. The two
processes which have been used commercially and semicommercially to make an
attractive product are freeze-drying and foam-mat drying (Ponting et al., 1964).
Freeze-drying provides a porous product with good volatiles retention, which rehy-
drates readily; however, careful packaging is required to avoid caking and/or dis-
coloration, and for many juices freeze-drying must be carried out at very low
temperatures to avoid product collapse (Bellows and King, 1973). Foam-mat drying
is shown schematically in Fig. 14-9. A foaming agent is added, and the juice or juice
concentrate is then blown with air or inert gas to give a stable foam, which is then
dried to give a porous, easily rehydrated product. Rapid drying of thin foam films
minimizes thermal degradation, but volatiles loss can be a problem.
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SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 757
SOLVENT EXTRACTION
Solvent extraction illustrates several aspects of process selection which arise once the
basic means of separation has been chosen, i.e., selection of an appropriate mass
separating agent, selection of overall process configuration, and selection of equip-
ment type.
Solvent Selection
Among the desirable features for an extraction solvent are the following:
1. It should have a high capacity for the species being separated into it. The higher the
solvent capacity, the lower the solvent circulation rate required.
2. It should be selective, dissolving one or more of the components being separated to a large
extent while not dissolving the other components to any large extent.
3. It should be chemically stable; i.e., it should not undergo irreversible reactions with
components of the feed stream or during regeneration.
4. It should be regenerable, so that the extracted species can be separated from it readily and
it can be reused again and again.
5. It should be inexpensive to keep the cost of maintaining solvent inventory and of replacing
lost solvent low.
6. It should be nontoxic and noncorrosive and should not be a serious contaminant to the
process streams being handled.
7. It should have a low enough viscosity to be pumped easily.
8. It should have a density different enough from that of the feed stream for the phases to
counterflow and separate readily.
9. It should not form so stable an emulsion that the phases cannot be separated adequately.
10. It should allow formation of immiscible liquid phases, even at the highest solute concen-
trations which could be encountered.
In some cases a solvent mixture may be used to derive properties that cannot be
achieved with pure solvents. Gerster (1966) discusses solvent selection in more detail.
Obviously no solvent will be best from all of these viewpoints, and the selection
of a desirable solvent involves compromises between these various factors, e.g., be-
tween capacity and selectivity.
The separation factor for a liquid-liquid extraction process is given by the ratio
of the activity coefficients of components / and j in liquid phases 1 and 2
*u = ~ (1-16)
nl IJ2
This separation factor indicates the tendency for component / to be extracted more
readily from phase 2 into phase 1 than component j is. If the solvent employed is not
very soluble in the feed phase (denoted phase 2), the activity coefficients of compon-
ents / and j in phase 2 will be nearly independent of the nature of the solvent.
Consequently the selectivity between components exerted by the solvent will be
determined by the ratio of the activity coefficients of the components in phase 1. This
ratio can be called the selectivity S,, of the solvent:
(14-1)
758 SEPARATION PROCESSES
The solubility of the preferentially extracted solute in the solvent phase, or the
capacity of the solvent for the extracted solute, is also related to activity coefficients
of the component being extracted:
*iA = ^ (1-15)
*!2 )'ll
Equation (1-15) gives the solubility of component i in phase 1 at equilibrium. Since
the activity coefficient of the transferring solute in the feed phase (again denoted
phase 2) is relatively independent of the nature of the solvent, the capacity of any
solvent for the transferring solute will be related primarily to the activity coefficient
of the solute in the solvent phase, the capacity of the solvent increasing as the activity
coefficient of the solute in the solvent phase decreases.
Physical interactions The theory of regular solutions developed by Hildebrand (Hil-
debrand et al., 1970) leads to the following expression for activity coefficients in a
liquid phase (Prausnitz, 1969), known as the Scatchard-Hildebrand equation:
(,«)
K
Z *)VJXJ
where 3 = ^â (14-3)
In these equations Vi is the molal volume (or reciprocal molar density) of component
/ and is assumed to be the same as the partial molal volume of that component in
solution; R is the gas constant, and T is the absolute temperature; <5,, known as the
solubility parameter of component i, is also the square root of the cohesive energy
density of component / in the pure state. The cohesive energy density is a measure of
the strength of intermolecular forces holding molecules together in the liquid state
per unit volume of liquid and is given by the ratio of the latent energy of vaporization
A£t, = A//1, â P AVv of a pure component to the molal volume of that component:
1/2
K
R
Xj is the mole fraction of component;', and hence VjXj/ £ VjXj in Eq. (14-3) is the
volume fraction of component j in a liquid mixture. Following Eq. (14-3), 5 in
Eq. (14-2) is the volume average solubility parameter of all components present in
the liquid phase in question. For a binary system of i and j, Eq. (14-2) for either
component in a liquid phase becomes
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 759
Table 14-6 shows solubility parameters for various selected organic compounds.
More extensive tabulations of solubility parameters are available (Garden, 1966;
Hildebrand et al., 1970). Solubility parameters are generally reported for 298 K, and
can be calculated from measured volumes and latent heats of vaporization inter-
polated or extrapolated to 298 K. Since P &VV, where Vv is the volume difference
between the gaseous and liquid states, is usually very nearly given by RT, A£t, can
usually be computed as A//,. â RT. The latent heat and molar volume can be
estimated from various correlations (Reid et al., 1977) when measured values are not
available. Lyckman et al. (1965) give correlations for predicting solubility par-
ameters and molal volumes from the theory of corresponding states, and Rheineck
and Lin (1968) suggest a group-contribution method for prediction of solubility
parameters. Konstam and Feairheller (1970) also discuss calculation of solubility
parameters for polar substances.
Table 14-6 Values of solubility parameters at 298 Kt (data from Hildebrand et al.,
1970, and Garden, 1966)
V,
S,
V,
6.
(cal/cm3)12
cm3 mol
(cal/cm3)1'2
cm3/mol
Water
18
23.2
Ethyl bromide
76
8.9
Ethylene glycol
56
15.7
Carbon tetrachloride
97
8.6
Phenol
88
14.5
Ethyl chloride
73
8.5
MethaTiol
40
14.5
Cyclohexane
109
8.2
Dimethyl sulfoxide
71
13.4
Cyclopentane
95
8.1
Nitromethane
54
12.6
Perfluorobenzene
115
8.1
Acetic acid
57
12.6
n-Hexadecane
295
8.0
Dimethyl formamidc
77
12.1
Ethylene (169 K)
760 SEPARATION PROCESSES
There have been a number of efforts to modify the solubility-parameter concept
to take into account the different types of intermolecular forces (dipole-dipole,
dipole-induced dipole, and dispersion forces; see Moore, 1963) as well as hydrogen
bonding for the prediction of solubilities and activity coefficients (Prausnitz, 1969).
In connection with the analysis of paint solvents Teas (1968) and others have sug-
gested the use of triangular diagrams with axes corresponding to the ordinary solubi-
lity parameter, some measure of polarity, and some measure of hydrogen-bonding
tendencies of any given substances. Prausnitz and coworkers (Prausnitz, 1969;
Weimer and Prausnitz, 1965; Prausnitz et al., 1966) have developed an approach
allowing for polarity and volume differences of molecules in predicting and analyzing
activity coefficients through use of the Flory-Huggins parameter, the Wilson equa-
tion, and other concepts. Garden (1966) has also suggested ways of allowing for
polarity effects upon molecular interactions.
The development leading to the Scatchard-Hildebrand equation for predicting
activity coefficients from solubility parameters assumes the molecules have similar
sizes, undergo interaction through dispersion forces alone, and are not associated in
solution (zero excess entropy of mixing). For the liquid mixtures encountered in
extraction processes these assumptions often do not hold well, and Eq. (14-2) can be
considered only a very rough first approximation; nonetheless, it has some use for
screening extraction solvents and generalizing.
First of all, it is apparent from Eqs. (14-2), (14-5), and (14-6) that mixtures of
components having nearly equal solubility parameters should exhibit activity
coefficients near unity. Substances in solution with other components having a sub-
stantially different solubility parameter will have activity coefficients much greater
than unity; if the solubility parameters are different enough, immiscibility may result.
This thinking is in accord with the concept of similar molecules giving ideal solutions
and dissimilar molecules giving strong positive deviations from ideality, as can be
seen by judging the positions of different types of compounds in Table 14-6. Notice
that polar molecules tend to have high solubility parameters while nonpolar
molecules have low solubility parameters. As a rough approximation, substances
must differ by about 3 (cal/cm3)1 2 or more in solubility parameter to generate two
liquid phases. Thus paraffinic hydrocarbons are not miscible with aniline, furfural,
dimethyl formamide, etc., but are miscible with most substances closer in solubility
parameter.
Under special conditions even seemingly similar liquid phases can be made
immiscible. One example of this is the separation of proteins, carbohydrates, and
other biochemical substances by partitioning between two immiscible polymer-
containing aqueous phases, e.g., a polyethylene glycol-water phase and a dextran-
water phase (Albertsson, 1971). Organic solvents tend to denature proteins, and most
proteins and carbohydrates are so hydrophilic that they are poorly extracted by
organic solvents. Hence these two-aqueous-phase extractions can accomplish separa-
tions that cannot be made by conventional extraction.
The general relationship between solvent capacity and solvent selectivity for
physically interacting solvent systems can be inferred from Eq. (14-2). If we suppose
that species C is to be a solvent to extract B preferentially from solutions of A and B,
the capacity of the solvent for B, given by Eq. (1-15), will decrease as the solubility
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 761
parameter of C moves away from that of B. By Eq. (14-2) or (14-5), yB in the C-rich
phase will increase as <5C moves away from (5B, and, since yB increases, Eq. (1-15) tells
us that the solvent capacity for B decreases. On the other hand, the selectivity of
extraction, given by Eq. (14-1), is related to solubility parameters by
In SBA = In VA - In >â¢â = ^ [(<5A - 6)2 - (<5B - d)2] (14-7)
if KA is assumed equal to KB. Eq. (14-7) can be rearranged to
In SBA = ^ (<5A - <5B)(<5A + 6B - 25) (14-8)
For C to be an effective extraction solvent we must have 5A > <5B > <5C or
<5C > (5B > <5A. As <5C becomes more different from <5A and <5B, 5 must move away from
<5A and <5B; the term in the right-hand-most parentheses of Eq. (14-8) will increase in
absolute magnitude, and SBA will become greater.
Thus for physically interacting solvents we have the interesting general observa-
tion that choosing a solvent with a solubility parameter more removed from the
solubility parameters of the mixture being separated will enhance the solvent selecti-
vity but reduce the solvent capacity. A compromise must be reached such that the
solvent solubility parameter is far enough removed to give good selectivity (and to
give immiscibility) but is not so different that the solvent has inadequate capacity.
Extractive distillation Regular-solution theory is somewhat more useful for analyz-
ing the performance of solvents for extractive distillation, since in that case the
solution nonideality is not strong enough to generate two liquid phases. For exam-
ple, Gerster et al. (1960) measured selectivities and activity coefficients of 32 different
solvents for effecting a separation of n-pentane and 1-pentene by extractive distilla-
tion. They found a strong correlation between the selectivity for the separation and
the activity coefficient of n-pentane in the solvent. The selectivity increases with
increasing activity coefficient, as predicted by regular-solution theory. For a given
activity coefficient, hydrogen-bonding solvents gave somewhat less selectivity than
non-hydrogen-bonding solvents.
Chemical complexing The regular-solution analysis illustrates why it is desirable to
search for solvents which will chemically react, hydrogen-bond, or complex preferen-
tially with the compound to be extracted. These effects are not accounted for in a
physical-interaction analysis, and they have the desirable result of increasing the
selectivity of the solvent while at the same time increasing its capacity. Thus a
regenerable chemical base can be a more desirable solvent for removing a carboxylic
acid from a hydrocarbon stream than a high-solubility-parameter physical
solvent would be. Similarly, if acetone were to be removed from water by solvent
extraction, chloroform would probably be preferable as a solvent to benzene (a
compound with a solubility parameter close to that of chloroform) because chloro-
form hydrogen-bonds preferentially with acetone (see discussion preceding the ex-
762 SEPARATION PROCESSES
traction example in Chap. 7). On the other hand, chlorinated hydrocarbons are
undesirable contaminants in effluent waters.
Candidate chemical-complexing mechanisms are outlined in Fig. 14-2.
An example Extraction of dilute acetic acid from aqueous streams is an important
problem, in part because it is difficult to strip acetic acid from water. Dilute acetic
acid solutions are found in many process effluents and are encountered in some
proposed schemes for biological oxidation of solid waste material.
Since acetic acid is highly polar and water-loving, most conventional solvents
which are immiscible with water give equilibrium distribution coefficients less than
1.0 for extraction of acetic acid from water (Treybal, 1973a). For example, ethyl
acetate, which has often been used for extracting acetic acid at feed concentrations of
10 percent and greater, gives a distribution coefficient of about 0.90. Cyclohexanone
and cyclohexanol, by virtue of their hydrogen-bonding abilities, give higher distribu-
tion coefficients, in the range of 1.2 to 1.3; however, cyclohexanol is highly viscous
and cyclohexanone has a density very close to that of water. Therefore these solvents
would probably be used only as components of solvent mixtures, along with diluents
which improve the viscosity and/or density properties for extraction (Eaglesfield
et al., 1953).
Solvents giving a higher equilibrium distribution coefficient for removal of acetic
acid from water at low concentrations involve some additional chemical effect. As
one example, Othmer (1978) has pointed out that acetic acid can be removed by
extraction from aqueous effluents from chemical pulping processes in paper manu-
facture. These streams typically have high contents of salts and other dissolved
solutes, such as sodium sulfate and lignosulfonates. Because of this high solute con-
tent it is possible to use acetone as a solvent, even though acetone is fully miscible
with water in the absence of the other solutes. The resulting distribution coefficient
for acetic acid is increased to the range 4.0 to 6.0. This is an example of a chemical
salting-out effect, due to the presence of high concentrations of ionic salts.
Another chemical-complexing approach involves the use of regenerable organic
bases, taking advantage of the acidity of acetic acid. Phosphoryl compounds, such as
phosphates and phosphine oxides, are organic bases because of the directed nature of
the P-»O bond. Trioctyl phosphine oxide has been found to be an effective regener-
able solvent for acetic acid extraction (Helsel. 1977), but it is comparatively expensive
(about S26 per kilogram). High-molecular-weight organic amines are also effective
bases for acetic acid extraction and are about an order of magnitude less expensive
(Wardell and King, 1978; Ricker et al., I919a,b). Tertiary amines, such as tri(C8 to
C10)amines, are readily regenerable; secondary and primary amines give still higher
distribution coefficients, but regeneration by distillation is hampered by irreversible
formation of amides.
Amine and phosphine oxide solvents require that other substances be added to
the solvent as diluents, both to dissolve the primary solvent and reduce the viscosity
and or density, if necessary, and also to provide a suitable solvating medium for the
acid-base complex. Thus solvent mixtures of intermediate composition give much
higher equilibrium distribution coefficients than either pure constituent in such cases.
For the amine systems more polar compounds, such as alcohols and ketones. are the
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 763
more effective diluents, from the standpoint of solvating the reaction complex.
However, alcohols are subject to esterification with acetic acid during regeneration
by distillation, and that reaction is difficult to reverse. For phosphine oxide solvents
alcohol diluents diminish the solvent power because of preferential hydrogen bond-
ing of the alcohol, rather than the acid, to the phosphoryl group, which is a strong
hydrogen acceptor. A diluent such as a ketone, which is a hydrogen acceptor but not
a hydrogen donor, is more effective (Ricker et al., 1979a).
Regeneration by back-extraction with an aqueous base, such as NaOH, is also a
possibility, but in that case the chemical value of recovered acetic acid is diminished
to that of sodium acetate.
Process Configuration
Once a separation method and a mass separating agent (if needed) have been chosen,
there is still flexibility in picking the flow configuration of a separation process. As an
example here, we shall use the basic idea of separating phenol from a dilute aqueous
feed by extraction into an immiscible solvent, followed by phenol recovery and
regeneration of the solvent by back-extraction into aqueous NaOH solution. Some of
the schemes that can be used have been discussed by Boyadzhiev et al. (1977) and
others and are shown in Fig. 14-10.
Scheme a is the straightforward approach of removing the phenol from the
aqueous feed by countercurrent extraction with the solvent in a first column,
followed by countercurrent back-extraction of the solvent with NaOH solution in a
second column. The solvent circulation rate in such a process is limited by the
maximum loading that can be achieved in the first column. For a strongly curved
equilibrium relationship, a desirable alternative can be to withdraw a portion of the
solvent part way along the regenerator and insert it part way along the first extraction
column (scheme b). This enables the remaining solvent in the regenerator to be
brought to a lower concentration of phenol (higher ratio of NaOH flow to solvent
flow in the lower part of the regenerator), and this smaller but highly regenerated
solvent stream can then be used to bring the aqueous effluent from the first column to
a lower phenol content.
Scheme c involves recycle of individual solvent streams between isolated stages
of the primary extractor and the regenerator (stage 1 paired with stage 1, stage 2 with
stage 2, etc.) This leads to lower solvent flows in individual stages (Hartland, 1967).
In scheme d the solvent is immobilized within a membrane, the feed flowing on one
side and the NaOH regenerant on the other (Klein et al., 1973). This is a form of
perstraction, mentioned earlier as an alternative for concentration of fruit juices. The
system is now limited by the transport capacity of the membrane-solvent system.
In the liquid-membrane process [scheme e, see Cahn and Li (1974)] the NaOH
solution is distributed as small droplets within larger drops of solvent, which rise
through a downflowing continuous feed stream. This gives the benefits of the thin
solvent membrane but in a form where a large interfacial area is more easily achieved
than with a fixed-membrane device. The liquid-membrane process can also be viewed
as an extraction process in which the solute capacity of a dispersed solvent has been
increased by addition of islands of an irreversibly reactive material. The process does
764 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Feed
(a)
NaOH
Feed
NaOH
(6)
Feed
(r)
NaOH
Feed
NaOH
(d)
Aqueous
Feed
r
Liquid-Membrane
Feed
NaOH
(e)
Figure 14-10 Alternative flow configurations for extraction of phenol from water, followed by
regeneration with NaOH solution.
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 765
require stabilization of the solute-uptake droplets within the solvent drops, as well as
facilities for separating both levels of liquid dispersion after the contacting.
Finally, scheme/is an approach where droplets of both the aqueous feed and the
NaOH solute-uptake medium are dispersed in a continuous, nonflowing solvent
phase (Boyadzhiev et al., 1977). Coalescence of the different kinds of drops is pre-
vented by incorporation of appropriate surface-active agents. If the solvent has a
density intermediate between that of the aqueous feed and that of the NaOH regener-
ant, countercurrent flow of the different kinds of drops can be achieved, in principle,
as shown in Fig. 14-10/ This approach also presents design and operational
problems.
Selection of Equipment
In Chap. 12 the relative merits of different sorts of tower internals for multistage
gas-liquid contacting operations were considered in some detail (see Tables 12-1 and
12-2). In this section we explore ways of selecting an appropriate device for carrying
out a liquid-liquid extraction process.
There are many different types of extraction equipment used in practice. Descrip-
tions and comparison of these are given by Hanson (1968, 1971), Treybal (1963,
1973ft), Akell (1966),"Reman (1966), and Marello and Poffenberger (1950). Several of
these devices are shown in Fig. 14-11. In summary, some of the different equipment
types available are as follows.
1. Spray column. This is the simplest device to construct. The dispersed phase is sprayed as
droplets into the continuous phase (the sprayer can be at the bottom of the column when
the less dense phase is to be dispersed). The operation of these devices is hampered by a
high degree of backmixing in the continuous phase.
2. Packed column. This is essentially a spray column with some form of divided packing
inside it. The packing serves to reduce the backmixing in the continuous phase, but the
backmixing is still important and hampers the action of a large number of transfer units.
3. Plate columns. Plate columns used for extraction are almost always perforated. The dis-
persed phase flows through the holes in the plates and collects on top of (for a heavy
dispersed phase) or below (for a light dispersed phase) the next tray, which then redis-
perses the liquid. The discrete stages are effective for reducing backmixing.
4. Pulsed column. The contents of either a packed column or a plate column can be pulsed by
applying intermittent surges of pump pressure to the column. This pulsing promotes
mass-transfer rates within the column, both because of increased interfacial area (drop
breakup) and increased mass-transfer coefficients. As a result, a pulsed column can give a
specified separation in less tower height than an otherwise equivalent unpulsed column.
The pulsed column provides some of the benefits of mechanical agitation without moving
parts in the column. However, pulsing can increase axial dispersion.
5. Baffle column. This device (not shown in Fig. 14-11) is an open vertical column with
various horizontal baffles built in at intervals along the height to reduce the extent of axial
mixing. Common baffling devices are disks and doughnuts. The disks are solid horizontal
circular plates, axially mounted and with a diameter less than that of the column. The
doughnuts are horizontal annular rings attached to the walls of the column. The construc-
tion resembles that of the rotary disk contactor (RDC) column shown in Fig. 14-11.
without the axial drive shaft.
766 SEPARATION PROCESSES
3
IS
T
£
Spray column
-»-R
Interface
Schcibel
Heavy phase in
Interfaces
Perforated
plate column
D--Q
D--a
-Vertical
baffle
Light phase in
Oldshue-Rushton
Light phase out
(c)
ȉ Heavy phase out
(via gravity leg)
Figure 14-11 Varieties of extraction equipment: {a) unagitated column contactors: (h) mechanically
agitated column types; (c) vertical type of mixer-settler.
Mechanically agitated columns. In these columns rotating agitators driven by a shaft
extending axially along the column stir up the liquid phases, promoting drop breakup and
mass transfer. Three varieties are shown in Fig. 14-11. In the Scheibel column regions
agitated by axially mounted stirrers are separated vertically from each other by regions of
wire mesh. The agitators promote dispersion and mass transfer. The mesh zones promote
coalescence and phase separation to keep the light and heavy phases flowing in the desired
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 767
directions up and down the column. In the RDC column rapidly rotating horizontal disks
serve to provide phase breakup and mass transfer through shear against the disks. Annular
rings separate the rotating disk regions from each other to discourage backmixing effects.
There is also an asymmetric rotating disk contactor (Hanson, 1968). The Oldshue-Rushton
(Lightnin CMContactor) column uses turbine impellers, doughnuts, and vertical baffles to
accomplish much the same result as the other devices in this category.
7. Graesser raining-bucket contactor. This is a unit quite different in concept, which is
described by Hanson (1968). It consists of a large, slowly rotating, horizontal, cylindrical
drum, inside of which are open " buckets " mounted on the cylinder wall. The two phases
are stratified in the drum, filling it. The buckets catch quantities of either phase and
transport them into the other phase, causing relatively large drops of each phase to fall or
rise through the other. This gentle dispersion and the resultant easy settling are of use with
systems which ordinarily do not settle easily because they tend to emulsify.
8. Mixer-settler. These devices provide separate compartments for mixing and for sub-
sequent phase separation through settling. The mixing is usually accomplished by rotating
mechanical agitators: however, one or both of the liquids may also be pumped through
nozzles, orifices, etc., to cause the mixing (Treybal, 1973h). Mixer-settler devices generally
give high mass-transfer efficiency, which makes reliable design possible using an
equilibrium-stage analysis based solely on the equilibrium data of the system, no transfer-
rate data really being required. Mixer-settler devices generally are more complex than
other devices and occupy a relatively large volume. Figure 14-11 shows that it is possible
to assemble mixer-settlers into a vertical staged configuration (Hanson, 1968).
9. Centrifugal contactors. These devices (not shown in Fig. 14-11) utilize centrifugal force to
promote countercurrent flow of the phases past each other more rapidly than is possible
through the action of gravity alone. The centrifugal force also promotes coalescence of
droplets where that is difficult. Centrifugal extractors can provide several (but not many)
equilibrium stages within a single device. A unique advantage of centrifugal extractors is
the very short residence time of the phases in the device, a feature which is often attractive
in the pharmaceutical industry. Different types of centrifugal contactor include the Pod-
bielniak extractor, the Westfalia extractor, and the DeLaval extractor.
10. Devices with two continuous liquid phases. One of the newer types of extractor uses as
internals a large number of long, continuous small-diameter fibers (Anon.. 1974; Pan,
Table 14-7 Classification of extraction equipment
Countercurrent flow
(if any) produced by
Gravity
Gravity
Gravity
Centrifugal
force
Phase interdispersion
produced by
Gravity
Pulsation
Mechanical
agitation
Centrifugal
force
Continuous-counterflow
contacting devices
Spray column,
packed column,
baffle column.
Pulsed packed
column
RDC contactor.
Oldshue-Rushton
column, Graesser
Podbielniak
extractor.
Westfalia
two-continuous-
phase devices
raining-bucket
contactor
extractor,
DeLaval
Discrete-stage contacting
devices (coalescence-
768 SEPARATION PROCESSES
The process
Minimum contact
time essential?
No
Poor setting character:
danger stable emulsions?
,,No
Small number of
stages required?
No
Appreciable number
of stages required?
Yes
CENTRIFUGAL CONTACTOR
Yes
CENTRIFUGAL CONTACTOR
GRAESSER CONTACTOR
Yes
Limited area
available?
Limited headroom
available'.'
Yes
,Yes
SIMPLE GRAVITY
COLUMN
MIXER-SETTLER
Yes
Limited area
available?
Limited headroom
available'1
Yes
Yes
MIXER-SETTLER
GRAESSER CONTACTOR
Large throughput?
Small throughput?
MECHANICALLY
AGITATED COLUMN
PULSED COLUMN
Figure 14-12 Selection guide for choosing extraction devices. (Adapted from Hanson. 1968; p. 90. used
by permission.)
1974). One of the liquid phases wets the fibers preferentially and flows axially along them,
while the other phase flows continuously in the interstices, in either cocurrent or counter-
current flow. This flow scheme largely avoids the formation of droplets and is therefore
effective for handling systems that are difficult to settle when a dispersion of droplets is
formed. In one such device the fibers are about 50 /jm in diameter and can be made of
steel, glass, or any of various other materials that can be formed into fibers.
Table 14-8 Advantages and disadvantages of different extraction equipment (data
from Akell, 1966)
Class of equipment
Advantages
Mixer-settlers
Continuous counterflow
contactors (no mechanical
drive)
Continuous counterflow
(mechanical agitation)
Centrifugal extractors
Good contacting
Handles wide flow ratio
Low headroom
High efficiency
Many stages available
Reliable scaleup
Low initial cost
Low operating cost
Simplest construction
Good dispersion
Reasonable cost
Many stages possible
Relatively easy scaleup
Handles low density difference
between phases
Low holdup volume
Short holdup time
Low space requirements
Small inventory of solvent
Table 14-9 Order of preference for extraction contacting devices
Factor or condition
Very low power input desired:
One equilibrium stage
Few equilibrium stages
Many equilibrium stages
Low to moderate power input
desired, three or more stages:
General and fouling service
Nonfouling service requiring low
residence time or small space
High power input
High phase ratio
Emulsifying conditions
No design data on mass-transfer
rates for system being considered
Radioactive systems
Disadvantages
Large holdup
High power costs
High investment
Large floor space
Interstage pumping may be
required
Limited throughput with small
density difference
Cannot handle high flow ratio
High headroom
Sometimes low efficiency
Difficult scaleup
Limited throughput with small
density difference
Cannot handle emulsifying
systems
Cannot handle high flow ratio
High initial costs
High operating cost
High maintenance cost
Limited number of stages in
single unit
770 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Table 14-7 classifies the various types of extractors by their distinguishing physi-
cal features.
Numerous authors have presented selection criteria for extraction equipment. A
scheme of selection logic proposed by Hanson (1968) is shown in Fig. 14-12. Some of
the reasons underlying the decision criteria indicated should be apparent from the
foregoing summary of different equipment types. For comparison with Hanson's
selection scheme and for augmentation of other factors not included in it, a list of
advantages and disadvantages of different classes of equipment is shown in Table
14-8. Yet another selection list covering different devices is shown in Table 14-9.
Selection criteria for extractors are also discussed by Reissinger and Schroter (1978).
SELECTION OF CONTROL SCHEMES
Any large-scale separation process requires a control scheme to assure relatively
smooth operation in the face of upsets and to maintain product specifications.
Analysis and selection of control systems is a complex field and largely beyond the
scope of this book. However, it is true that the evaluation of control schemes can
interact closely with process selection and evaluation. In the extreme, there are some
separation processes which may seem attractive on the basis of steady-state analysis
but which are not chosen for plant use because they are very difficult or impossible to
control.
The number of control loops and the types of control loops which can be used
with a separation process are determined by the same kind of thinking as enters into
the application of the description rule (Chap. 2 and Appendix C). No more variables
can be controlled than are necessary to specify the operation of the process fully.
Installing a greater number of control loops will cause the operation of the process to
cycle and probably become unstable, because an effort is being made to specify more
independent variables than is possible. Installing fewer control loops than the
number of specified variables will mean that the operation of the process cannot be
well specified and that output variables will wander; also the process may not oper-
ate as smoothly as it would with a full control system. The installation and use of the
control system may be looked upon as fixing the operating portion of those variables
which are set by construction or controlled during operation by independent, external
means.
In the use of the description rule for problem specification the variables chosen
must be truly independent. No subset of specified variables should be uniquely
related and determined by a subset of equations describing the system. The same
restriction holds for the selection of control loops for a separation process: the
controlled variables must in fact be independent of each other. Thus it is generally
not workable to place both the products from a separation process on flow control,
since these product flows are uniquely related by the overall material balance for the
process. The feed flow rate will change from time to time (it will change somewhat
even if it is under flow control itself), and it will therefore not be possible to maintain
both product flows at the set-point values. The result will be oscillatory operation.
Control and dynamic behavior of distillation columns and other separation
processes are reviewed by Buckley (1964) and Harriott (1964). The control of distilla-
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 771
tion columns is explored in more extensive detail by Rademaker et al. (1975) and
Shinskey (1977). Some of the more practical aspects of distillation control are dis-
cussed by Lieberman (1977).
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PROBLEMS
14-A, Suggest likely separation processes to be considered for separating an equimolal mixture of
cyclohexane and benzene into relatively pure products on an industrial scale. If a mass separating agent is
to be used, indicate what it should be.
14-B, Suggest two or more logical separation processes for the removal of 1 mol "â benzene vapor from a
waste nitrogen stream being discharged to the atmosphere. If a mass separating agent is to be employed,
indicate a likely substance to use.
14-C, Suggest the most logical separation process for the separation of isopropanol from n-propanol on a
large scale. If a mass separating agent is to be used, indicate what it should be.
14-D2 Suggest one or more logical separation processes for the nearly complete removal of water present
at saturation level in liquid benzene at ambient temperature. If a mass separating agent is to be used,
indicate what it should be.
14-E2 Environmental concerns require that concentrations of certain heavy metals in effluent waters be
kept very low. Suppose that a plant has a water discharge of about 2.5 m J/h which contains about 2 ppm
cadmium. Indicate what separation processes could be useful for removal of this contaminant (a) if the
cadmium is present as Cd2* in solution and I/O if the cadmium is adsorbed on finely divided organic
particles.
14-F2 A company produces zirconium tetrachloride by chlorination of sands rich in zirconia. A substan-
tial by-product is silicon tetrachloride. SiCI4. for which a market exists at approximately 10 cents per
pound. The company wants to install facilities for the recovery and purification of SiCl4. The available
feed stream is a liquid at atmospheric pressure and -34°C, containing 5000 kg/day SiCl4 along with
7500 kg/day C12. Titanium tetrachloride is present to approximately 0.3 mole percent. The product SiQ4
should contain no more than 20 ppm C12 and 5 ppm TiCl4. The recycle chlorine to the chlorinator
should be gaseous and should contain no more than 5 mol "0 SiCl4. Give a flowsheet of an appropriate
process for the purification of this SiCl4-bearing stream. Show all vessels, heat exchangers, pumps, etc.
Indicate approximate operating temperatures and pressures at pertinent points in the process. Note:
Silicon tetrachloride decomposes when contacted with water.
774 SEPARATION PROCESSES
14-G2 As a new approach to the recovery of volatile flavor and aroma species during fruit-juice process-
ing it is suggested that an immiscible liquid solvent be contacted with the fresh juice to extract the light
organic volatile species. A suitable solvent might be a fluorocarbon, approved by the FDA. The fruit juice,
once the volatiles had been extracted out, would be concentrated by evaporation of about 70 percent of the
initial water present. The concentrate would then be contacted with the volatiles-laden solvent to pick the
volatiles back up from the solvent. The solvent would then be recirculated. Assess the workability and
desirability of such a process for volatiles retention.
14-H2 Fermentation processes often produce a complex mixture of components, which require separa-
tion. Souders et al. (1970) discuss the separation ofthe fermentation broth in penicillin manufacture, using
solvent extraction. Equilibrium distribution coefficients for the solvent considered are shown in Fig. 14-13
as a function of the pH of the aqueous phase (the broth). The particular shape of these curves results from
the fact that all the components are weak acids. HA,, for which there is an equilibrium distribution
coefficient k.t for the unionized form
*!,'
[HAJ.
[HAJ.
where subscripts o and w refer to the organic and aqueous phases, respectively. The degree of dissociation
in the aqueous phase comes from an ionization constant k2l
, _[H*UA,-].
"" [HAJ.
â
E
1
Figure 14-13 Equilibrium distribution
ratios for various constituents in
penicillin fermentation broths. (From
Souders el al.. 1970: p. 41: used hy
permission.)
SELECTION OF SEPARATION PROCESSES 775
Combining these expressions gives an overall distribution coefficient K.,
K = [HAJ0 ku
[HA,.]W + [Ar], l+fc2|./[H + j
At higher values of pH, [H*J is small and the second term" in the denominator dominates. Kt is then
directly proportional to [H + ], and therefore log K, decreases linearly with increasing pH, dropping one
decade per pH unit. In the other extreme of low pH (high [H*]) the first term in the denominator
dominates, and K, is effectively constant. The relative positions of the curves for different broth constitu-
ents in Fig. 14-13 are governed by the individual values of kli and k2,.
Suppose that a broth concentrate has the following composition:
Component
Wt "â
Component
Wt %
Penicillin F
12
CX-1
s
Penicillin G
30
CX-2
g
Penicillin K
30
Phenylacetic acid
2
TX-1
7
Acetic acid
1
TX-2
5
Suggest a solvent-extraction scheme which will serve to remove the various other components to a large
extent from penicillins G and K.
14-13 Explain the statement under Eq. (14-8): "For C to be an effective extraction solvent we must have
5fi>6B> dc or <5C > SB > <5A."
U-,1, Membrane permeation processes have been investigated in recent years as means of separating
hydrocarbon liquid mixtures which are otherwise difficult to separate. For example, membranes have been
found which, for a given fugacity-difference driving force, will pass benzene much more readily than
cyclohexane. The permeate tending to pass through these polymeric membranes is enriched in benzene
relative to the portion of the feed mixture which does not cross the membrane.
The design of a membrane separation device must somehow provide a fugacity difference of the
preferentially passed component to cause it to migrate across the membrane from the feed side to the
permeate side. Some difficulty arises in accomplishing this, since the permeate necessarily contains a
greater proportion of that component. Thus, if the mixtures on both sides are binary and the pressures and
temperatures are the same on both sides, the chemical potential of the preferentially passed component
(benzene in the case cited) is greater on the permeate side than on the feed side and as a result that
component will tend to cross the membrane in the reverse direction. What is needed is a method of
increasing chemical potential in ways other than changing the relative proportions of components within a
binary mixture.
Using as an example a case where the feed-side mixture contains benzene and cyclohexane in a 1 : 1
ratio and the permeate side contains these components in a 7 : 3 ratio, suggest two different practical ways
in which the chemical potential difference can be changed to the desired direction. The feed is a liquid
mixture of benzene and cyclohexane. The feed and permeate streams are to flow in thin channels along the
membrane and on either side of it. Confirm the practicability of both your methods by appropriate
calculations.
14-K2 A possible flowsheet for the manufacture of decaffeinated instant coffee is shown in Fig. 14-14.
Coffee beans, whole or cut, have caffeine extracted from them with an appropriate solvent. Residual
solvent is removed, after which the beans are roasted and ground. Hot water is then used to extract coffee
solution from the roasted grounds. This extract typically has a solute content in the range of 28 to 35
weight percent (Moores and Stefanucci, 1964).
Two routes are used commercially to convert extract into dry, instant-coffee particles. In the first,
constituting about 70 percent of the market for instant coffee of all sorts, much of the water is removed by
multieffect evaporation, after which the concentrated product is fed to a spray dryer, where the remaining
water is removed through contact of droplets with hot air. In the second route, accounting for about 30
percent of the market for instant coffee, much of the water is removed from the extract by freeze concentra-
tion, and the resultant concentrate is freeze-dried.
776 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Coffee beans
Volatiles
recovery
ââ¢â¢ Warm air
V
i > Spray-dried product
SPRAY DRYING
Refrig.
Steam
Roast and
grind
Freeze-dried
product
Water
(as ice)
Water
DECAFFEINATION EXTRACTION FREEZE-CONCENTRATION FREEZE-DRYING
FREEZING
Figure 14-14 Processing routes for the manufacture of decaffeinated instant coffee.
The flavor and aroma of coffee are the result of numerous volatile organic compounds, which are
easily lost during processing. Volatiles are recovered where possible, e.g., from the initial vapor formed
upon evaporation. Better yet, processing steps are chosen and designed so as to minimize volatiles loss.
Caffeine has the structure
CH3
CH,
It is highly water-soluble but will also partition into some solvents. Chlorinated solvents, e.g., trichloro-
ethylene, have classically been used for caffeine extraction, but there has been concern about the effects of
residual quantities of these solvents left in the instant product. Recovered caffeine is used in the soft-drink
industry.
(a) Why is it desirable to concentrate the extract first, by evaporation or freeze-concentration, before
spray drying or freeze-drying?
(b) Suggest why evaporation is paired as a preconcentration process with spray drying, and freeze-
concentration is paired with freeze-drying. Freeze-concentration is a more expensive process than ordin-
ary evaporation.
(c) Hot water contacts the roast and ground coffee particles countercurrently to make the extract:
this is typically done using the Shanks system of rotating fixed beds (Fig. 4-32). What is the probable main
benefit achieved from the countercurrent flow?
(d) With the concern about chlorinated solvents, several alternate solvent possibilities for decaffeina-
tion have been explored. Assess (i) liquid carbon dioxide, (ii) water, and (Hi) turpentine, listing desirable
and undesirable features. Assume that caffeine can be removed efficiently in each case.
(e) In Fig. 14-14 decaffeination is accomplished by extraction of green coffee beans, before roasting.
What would be the advantages and disadvantages of solvent decaffeinating (i) the extract, before
concentration, (//) the extract, after concentration, (n'i) the final dried product, and (n-) roast and ground
coffee, instead ?
APPENDIX
CONVERGENCE METHODS AND SELECTION OF
COMPUTATION APPROACHES
A trial-and-error solution of an implicit equation involving a single variable consists of assum-
ing values for the unknown variable until a value is found which satisfies the equation. An
equation involving a single variable \ can be written as
/(x) = 0 (A-l)
where/(.x) is the function resulting from putting all terms of the equation on the left-hand side.
In a trial-and-error, or iterative, solution successive values of .v are assumed according to a
systematic plan until a value of .v which causes/(.x) to be zero is found. Suitable systematic
plans for this purpose are called convergence methods.
DESIRABLE CHARACTERISTICS
In devising or choosing a convergence method for a particular calculation, one should seek
several desirable characteristics:
1. The convergence method should lead to the desired root of the equation. If the equation has
multiple roots, the convergence method should lead reliably to the particular root in
question.
2. The convergence method should be stable; it should approach the root asymptotically or in
a well-damped oscillatory fashion, rather than developing large oscillations of successive
values of the trial variable.
3. The convergence method should lead rapidly to the desired solution. Many iterations or
many computations per iteration will require more computer time. This speed-of-
convergence criterion is particularly important when the equation is involved in a subrou-
tine which must be solved many times in the course of a main calculation.
4. Iteration should be avoided wherever possible. For example, it is usually better to solve a
cubic equation by an algebraic approach than by an iterative solution.
5. If there is any doubt whether convergence has been achieved, it is desirable to surround the
answer, i.e., come at it from both sides.
DIRECT SUBSTITUTION
A number of convergence methods have been developed for equations implicit in one variable
and for simultaneous implicit equations involving more than one unknown variable (Beckett
and Hurt, 1967; Lapidus, 1962; Southworth and DeLeeuw, 1965: Henley and Rosen, 1969;
777
778 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Figure A-l Convergence by direct
substitution.
etc.). One of the simplest is direct substitution, which can be used if the equation can be put in
the form
4>(x) = x (A-2)
where are
computed. The derivative corresponds to the slope of the dot-dash straight line in Fig. A-4.
The intersection of this line with the abscissa gives .x(. At ,xt we once again compute ^(.x^ and
\df(x)/dx\f,fl, and repeat the procedure to obtain ,x2, etc. The trial value of ,x for the (/ + l)th
iteration is computed as
Xl+i = .Xj-
[4f (*)/<**],.
(A-5)
Even the Newton procedure does not guarantee convergence. For example, suppose that
there were a maximum in the/(.x) curve between .x0 and the desired solution, as shown in
Fig. A-5. In such a case the Newton method is divergent or reaches an undesired root.
Higher-order convergence methods also exist; there are third-order schemes involving
calculations of both first and second derivatives, and fourth-order schemes which involve the
first three derivatives. Usually fewer iterations are required the higher the order, since the error
diminishes more rapidly from trial to trial. On the other hand, the higher-order methods
require the evaluation of a number of derivatives at each point which is equal to the order
minus 1. These derivatives must be obtained either through analytical expressions or through
Figure A-4 Newton convergence scheme.
CONVERGENCE METHODS AND SELECTION OF COMPUTATION APPROACHES 781
f(.x)
Solution
Figure A-5 Divergent situation for Newton con-
vergence method.
the evaluation of/(.x) at incrementally different values of x. Either way, a higher-order method
requires more computation per trial value of .x. As a result, the choice between convergence
methods of various orders is often not apparent a priori.
One effective higher-order version of the false-position method involves fitting three
calculated points with a hyperbola (Hohmann and Lockhart, 1972).
INITIAL ESTIMATES AND TOLERANCE
In order to implement a convergence method for the computer it is necessary to provide some
procedure for obtaining an initial estimate x0 and to indicate the tolerance, which is the
allowable error in/(.x) within which the calculation will be stopped. The initial estimate can be
selected in one of two ways: one can specify a particular value for .x0 which is known to be in a
region such that the convergence method will lead to the converged solution in a straightfor-
ward manner, or if the calculation is being repeated for a number of different values of other
variables included in /(.x), one can use the last previous converged value of .x as the first
estimate for the next calculation.
The tolerance should be selected so that x will be found within the desired degree of
precision but should not be low enough to require an unnecessarily large number of iterations.
If there is a possibility that the specified tolerance is too large, it is useful to surround the
answer by coming at it from both sides.
MULTIVAR1ABLE CONVERGENCE
Often a multivariable problem is encountered in which values of n variables are to be found so
as to satisfy n independent, simultaneous, implicit equations. Two basic approaches can be
used for such problems, sequential or simultaneous. A sequential convergence is illustrated in
Fig. A-6. If two variables .x and y in two equations are unknown, the approach is to assume a
782 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Oulcr loop
Inner loop
l convergence procedure
Compute i, from i, ,. etc.
.v convergence procedure
Compute v, from v, ,. etc.
END
Figure A-6 Sequential convergence of two-unknown problem with two equations: f,(x. y) â¢â¢
/:(*, >') = 0.
: 0 and
value for .v (= .x0) and proceed directly to a single-variable convergence loop that will find the
converged value ofy for.x = .KO from one of the two equations. The other equation is then used
in an outer convergence loop to find a new value of x ( = .Xi). The inner loop is then entered
once moret and produces a converged value ofy for .v = .x,. The outer loop then yields a value
of \2, and the calculation continues until the outer loop has also achieved convergence.
This concept of nesting loops with convergence of one variable at a time can be used for
situations involving any number of unknown variables in an equivalent number of indepen-
dent equations. As the number of variables increases, a very large number of trips through the
inner loops will be required. At the possible sacrifice of stability in the calculation one can use
instead a simultaneous approach in which all unknown variables are moved toward conver-
t It is reasonable to choose the initial estimate ofy each time as the converged value ofy from the
previous trial.
CONVERGENCE METHODS AND SELECTION OF COMPUTATION APPROACHES 783
gence together. There will be only one convergence loop in which the errors in all equations
are used to give new values of all variables. The most popular simultaneous convergence
method is the multivariate Newton approach, a generalization of the single-variable Newton
method.
In the multivariate Newton method, corrections to each unknown variable are made by
assuming that all partial derivatives are linear between the last calculated point and the
converged solution. Therefore in a two-variable problem we choose xi +1 and yi+ r such that
-fi(xt,y,) =
and -f2(xt,yt)<
x, y)
dx
By
Sf2(x, y)
dy
(A-6)
(A-7)
In this way/! and/2 should become zero. Solving for xi+l and yi+1, we have the two-variable
analogs of Eq. (A-5)
(A-, y)/dy] - [f2(x., K)F/,(.x, y)/dy]
x1
/,(x, y)/dx][df2(x, y)/8y] -
lft(x,,y,)]W2(xt
.x, y)/dy][df2(x, y)/dx]
(x, yVSy][df2(x, y)/cx] - (SJ\(x, y)/8x][df2(x, y)/dy]
(A-8)
(A-9)
All derivatives are evaluated at x = .x, and y = yt. Put in more compact determinant form,
Eqs. (A-8) and (A-9) become
f*(xi,y,)
a/,(.x, y)/Sx df,(x, y)/dy
df2(x, y)/dx cf2(x. y)/?y
(A-10)
following Cramer's rule for solving simultaneous linear equations. The corresponding expres-
sion for yi+l â yt is obtained by interchanging y and .x in Eq. (A-10).
In strictly analogous fashion we can obtain the convergence formula for each variable Xj
in a multivariable situation where there are n unknown variables x^ .x2,.... \j , xn related
by n equations of the form /i (.x i, x2, ..., xa) = 0,/2(xi, x2, ..., .xn) = 0, ..., fk(xi, x2, ....
.x,) = 0,...,/â(*,, xt .Xj,..., xa) = 0. as follows:
'i /dx i 8fi /dx2 ''' âft '" Bfi MX»
â¢xj. i + 1 â Xj. i â
-/* â¢â¢â¢ %MX.
-/n â¢â¢â¢ Sf./Sx.
fa/ext dj
â¢â¢' 8f2/8xn
(A-H)
df./dxt
The multivariate Newton convergence scheme generally gives rapid convergence when
one is near the solution, but it may be divergent if some of the starting values are well removed
784 SEPARATION PROCESSES
from the solution. Often an effective procedure for a large multivariable problem is to combine
the sequential and simultaneous approaches, taking a simultaneous solution for several of the
variables as one loop in a nest of sequential loops for the other variables.
One disadvantage of the multivariate Newton method is that n* derivatives must be
computed on each iteration. The amount of computation per iteration can often be substan-
tially reduced with little loss in convergence speed or stability by using a paired simultaneous
approach, also known as a partitioned convergence scheme. In such a method each variable is
still corrected in each iteration in a single loop. In this case, however, the new value of each
variable is determined from a single equation, instead of all equations being used to obtain
new values of all variables, as in the multivariate Newton approach. Each variable is paired
with a different equation in this modification, that is,/,(.x, y) with x and/2(.v, y) with y in a
two-variable problem.
The paired simultaneous method works well if each equation is paired with that variable
which has a dominant effect upon the equation, and which variable this is can often be
determined from a physical analysis of the problem.
The sequential convergence scheme is also partitioned or paired, and again it is important
to link each function with the independent variable which has the greater effect upon it. In
Fig. A-6, fi has been paired with >⢠and /2 has been paired with .x.
When there is no clear physical reasoning for pairing variables and equations in a certain
way, it is probably best to use a full simultaneous approach.
CHOOSING /(.x)
Often it will be possible through algebraic manipulation to put the function(s) which are to be
reduced to zero into a number of different but equivalent forms. Certain of these forms will
give more rapid convergence than others. The following guidelines are useful in selecting the
best form for/(.x):
1. The range of allowable values of.x should be bounded; i.e., solving for an unknown variable
which varies between - 1 and + 1 is preferable to solving for one that can vary from â oo to
+ 00.
2. The function/(.x) should have no spurious roots within the allowable range of .x.
3. Maxima and minima and, to a lesser extent, second-order points of inflection in /(.x)
hamper convergence.
4. To the extent that/(.x) is more nearly linear in .x, convergence by almost any method will be
more rapid.
REFERENCES
Beckett, R., and J. Hurt (1967): "Numerical Calculations and Algorithms." McGraw-Hill. New York.
Henley, E. J., and E. M. Rosen (1969): " Material and Energy Balance Computations," Wiley, New York.
Hohmann. E. C, and F. J. Lockhart (1972): CHEMTECH. 2:614.
Lapidus, L. (1962): " Digital Computation for Chemical Engineers." McGraw-Hill. New York.
Southworth, R. W., and S. L. DeLeeuw (1965): "Digital Computation and Numerical Methods,"
McGraw-Hill. New York.
APPENDIX
B
ANALYSIS AND OPTIMIZATION OF
MULTIEFFECT EVAPORATION
In Chap. 4 it was shown that multieffect evaporation requires less steam to accomplish an
evaporation than a single-effect evaporation. A three-effect evaporation process is shown in
Fig. B-l. The feed is a salt solution entering the first effect. The steam to cause evaporation is fed
at a high enough pressure and temperature to the coils of the first effect and causes evapora-
tion of an amount of water from the salt solution equivalent in latent heat to the quantity of
steam condensing. This evaporated water serves as condensing steam to cause evaporation
from the salt solution in the second effect, and so on. In order for there to be a driving force for
heat transfer in the desired direction across the evaporator coils each successive effect must
operate at a lower pressure than the one before.
Cooling water
Water vapor
(I -/,)H/kg/h
Water vapor
(/, -./2)w;kg/h
Condensing steam
Ts, S,,kg/h
Feed salt solution
VV0kgH2O/h
FIRST EFFECT SECOND EFFECT
Figure B-l Three-effect evaporation system.
THIRD EFFECT
785
786 SEPARATION PROCESSES
SIMPLIFIED ANALYSIS
A simple analysis can be made of a multiefTect evaporation system if we assume that
latent-heat effects are completely dominant (no heat requirement for preheating the feed, etc.),
that the elevation in boiling point of the salt solution due to dissolved salts is negligible, that
the heat-transfer coefficient from condensing steam to boiling solution in each effect is con-
stant at a value U, and that the latent heat of vaporization of water is independent of tempera-
ture and salt concentration.
Establishing notation for this analysis, we shall define the following variables (English
units are given first, with SI units in parentheses):
Ui = heat-transfer coefficient in effect i, assumed constant and equal to U in simple
analysis, Btu/h ⢠ft2 ⢠°F (k J/h ⢠m2 ⢠°C)
a, = heat-transfer area of coils in effect i, ft2 (m2)
W0 = amount of water in feed salt solution, Ib/'h (kg/h)
fi = fraction of water in feed that remains in salt solution leaving effect i
N = number of effects
S0 = steam condensation rate in coils of first effect, Ib/h (kg/h)
7^ = saturation temperature of steam to first effect. °F (°C)
TJ = saturation temperature of vapor generated in effect i ( = boiling temperature of
liquid in effect i if boiling-point elevation due to dissolved salts is neglected), °F (°C)
A = latent heat of vaporization of water. Btu/lb (kJ/kg)
Two types of equations are required for this simplified analysis, enthalpy balances and
heat-transfer rate equations. The enthalpy balances relate the amount of evaporation or
condensation in one effect to the amount of evaporation or condensation in other effects:
So = (1 -./',) W0 = (./, -h)W0 = â¢â¢â¢ = (/v-i -/v)Wo (B-l)
The amount of water evaporated in each effect is the same, since we have taken the latent heat
of vaporization to be a constant and have neglected all sensible-heat effects. The heat release
from condensation in the coils of each effect is /.W0( £-_2 â /)_,), and the heat consumption for
boiling in that effect is ;.W0(./j_ , - /,).
The heat-transfer rate equations relate the rate of heat transfer across the coils of an effect
to either the rate of condensation in the coils or the rate of boiling in the evaporation chamber:
(B-2)
In a design problem we would typically specify the value of /\, corresponding to the
overall degree of concentration of the salt solution in the evaporator system: W0 also would be
specified, as would Tv. the temperature of condensation of the steam generated in the last
effect, which is set by the available cooling water temperature for the final condenser. The term
N also will be set. either independently or through an optimization (see following discussion).
Equations (B-l) now represent N independent equations in N unknowns (S0 and ft, f2
/N-I). Hence we can solve for these variables, finding that
/.-â¢-/.-⢠(B-3)
ANALYSIS AND OPTIMIZATION OF MULTIEFFECT EVAPORATION 787
which corresponds to l/N times the total evaporation occurring in each effect, and
(B-4)
which indicates that the steam consumption rate is 1/JV times the total evaporation.
We are now left with 2N â 1 unknowns, as follows:
alt a2, ..., aN N unknowns
T,, T2 TV - i N â 1 unknowns
These equations are related by Eqs. (B-2), which are N independent equations. Hence N â 1
additional variables remain at our disposal to be specified. This gives us the opportunity to
optimize the relative heat-transfer areas of the different effects of the evaporator system. Since
the left-hand sides of Eqs. (B-2) are all equal, we can take advantage of the fact that
(T, - 7\) + (T, -
Tw. , - Tv) =T,-TH
(B-5)
in the absence of boiling-point elevations due to dissolved solute. Equation (B-5) can be used
to rearrange and add Eqs. (B-2), giving
1!',.
ai a2
.. , =
aN
U(T.-TK)N
W0(l -./.v)A
(B-6)
Following Eqs. (B-3) and (B-4), W0(l - /,V)/N has been substituted into Eq. (B-6) for the
constant left-hand sides of Eqs. (B-2). The right-hand side of Eq. (B-6) is composed of known
quantities, and it remains to choose optimum values of the areas of the individual effects.
The installed cost of any effect of an evaporator system can generally be related to the
heat-transfer area of the evaporator raised to a power m, which is usually less than unity (King,
1963; Badger and Standiford, 1958). Hence the total installed cost of the evaporator effects is
given by
Installed cost = A(0(1 -ft,
= 0 (B-9)
788 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Setting the partial derivatives equal to zero gives
, ' - Aaf 2 =0
ca,
~ = mAal - ' - A«v 2 = 0
<>v
The equation for PG.'Ph is identical to Eq. (B-6). From Eqs. (B-10) at = a2 = â¢â¢ ⢠= a.\ at the
optimum.
Since the areas are equal. Eq. (B-6) becomes
Wo(l -/V)A
"' = V(T^ T~)
Notice that the area per effect for this simple analysis is independent of the number of effects.
This conclusion may be surprising at first, but it is the result of two compensating factors. As
the number of effects increases, the amount to be evaporated in each effect decreases and the
left-hand side of Eq. (B-2) decreases in inverse proportion to N. At the same time the
temperature-difference driving force for heat transfer on the right-hand side of Eq. (B-2) also
decreases in inverse proportion to N. Thus a, is independent of N.
It is also interesting to note that once a multieffect evaporation system subject to this
simple analysis has been built and is in operation with the areas of each effect now established.
there are few independent operating variables left. For example, the water-vapor pressures or
saturation temperatures in each effect are not independent, and will adjust as necessary to give
equal rates of heat transfer across the coils of each effect [Eqs. (B-2)] so as to keep the enthalpy
balance around each effect [Eqs. (B- 1 )] through the same amount of evaporation occurring in
each effect. Similarly, the steam-condensation rate in the first effect cannot be adjusted in-
dependently and will level out to give the required amount of evaporation in the first effect.
subject to the steady-state value of T, â Tt.
OPTIMUM NUMBER OF EFFECTS
The determination of the optimum number of effects for a multieffect evaporation system
is a classical optimisation involving the balance between operating costs and capital equip-
ment costs. The primary operating cost is for the steam consumption in the first effect.
Through Eq. (B-4) this cost is given by
Steam cost = B^--^-0- (B-12)
where B is the cost of steam per pound. When we combine Eqs. (B-7) and (B-l 1). the annual
fixed charges for the evaporator equipment can be expressed as
Fixed charges for evaporators = C
N (B-13)
where C is a constant equal to the product of A from Eq. (B-7) and the fraction of the installed
equipment cost that makes up the annual fixed charges. The total annual cost is then
Total cost = Bâ + C
U(T, - TN)
N (B-14)
ANALYSIS AND OPTIMIZATION OF MULTIEFFECT EVAPORATION 789
Equation (B-14) has the form of
Cost
const,
N
+ (const2)(N)
(B-15)
One of the interesting properties of an equation involving the sum of a term in N ' and a term
in N* ' is that the minimum cost will correspond to the value of N for which the two terms on
the right-hand side are equal. The reader can prove this by simple differentiation. Thus the
optimum number of effects is given by
_
7Vo'"~
const
const,
[17(7;-Ty)
[(i -
(B-16)
Since m, the cost-vs.-area exponent, is less than unity, the optimum number of effects will be
larger for higher steam costs, lower evaporator costs, higher heat-transfer coefficients, higher
steam-to-cooling-water temperature differences, lower latent heats of evaporation of the solu-
tion being concentrated, higher degrees of concentration of the solution, and higher feed rates.
MORE COMPLEX ANALYSES
Figure B-2 gives a flow diagram of a multieffect evaporator system for seawater conver-
sion into fresh water, which was used in the U.S. Department of the Interior demonstration
plant at Freeport, Texas, and is discussed by Standiford and Bjork (1960) and by King (1963).
The scheme makes extensive use of additional heat exchangers which serve to preheat the
seawater feed to the temperature of the first effect. The heat for the feed preheating is obtained
from the sensible heat of the condensate leaving each of the effects and from portions of the
overhead vapor from each effect which are drawn off and condensed. The system shown in
Fig. B-2 uses forward feed of the brine from effect to effect, in the direction of decreasing
evaporation temperatures and pressures. It is also possible to use backward feed, in which the
feed seawater enters the last (lowest-pressure) effect and flows in the direction of increasing
temperatures and pressures between effects. Such a scheme requires much less elaborate
preheat equipment but does require pumps to transfer the brine between effects. In seawater
conversion, a primary operating problem is the formation of calcium sulfate or other scales on
EFFECT 1
EFFECT 2
EFFECT 3
EFFECT 4
Steam in,
212 F
Preheated
feed
AUXILIARY
CONDENSER
Sea water
Sea water in
â" Water out
Brine out
Figure B-2 Multieffect seawater-evaporation system using forward feed and preheat through vapor
bleed and condensate heat exchangers. (Adapted from King, 1963, p. 149: used h\- permission.!
790 SEPARATION PROCESSES
the heat-transfer surfaces within the effects. The tendency for calcium sulfate to precipitate is
greatest where the brine concentration is highest or the temperature is highest, because of the
inverse solubility curve of calcium sulfate with respect to temperature. Backward feed has the
disadvantage of producing the highest temperatures and highest brine concentrations in
the first effect together, whereas forward feed has the advantage of bringing the most dilute
brine to the high temperatures of the first effect.
King (1963) has given the results of an optimization calculation to determine the opti-
mum number of effects in the seawater conversion plant shown in Fig. B-2. The analysis allows
for a number of complicating effects, e.g., variation of the heat-transfer coefficient with respect
to temperature, boiling-point elevation due to the salt content of the brine (a function of
concentration), installation costs for all the heat exchangers, and the need for purging a certain
amount of the overhead vapor to accomplish full feed preheating, but retains the condition
that the different effects all have the same heat-transfer area. Economic conditions have
changed substantially since this analysis was made.
When the heat-transfer coefficient for the evaporators varies from effect to effect, the
vapor-bleed preheat is used and/or the boiling-point elevation can vary from effect to effect,
Eq. (B-6) is no longer valid, and other secondary cost terms must be considered in Eq. (B-7).
As a result the equal-area-per-effect case is not necessarily still optimum. If the areas per effect
are not held equal, an optimization problem with N â 1 independent variables results for any
set number of effects. Itahara and Stiel (1968) have found that the technique of dynamic
programming is well suited to this problem and have obtained a solution to the same problem
solved for equal areas by King (1963). allowing the areas of the effects to be different.
The very large increases in steam (energy) costs occurring in recent years have
served to increase the design optimum number of effects to values of the order of 17 and
greater for seawater desalination. In part, the upper limit on the number of effects used is
placed by the need to have a sufficient thermal driving force in each effect to give stable
operation, and it has therefore become useful to investigate and develop economical evapora-
tor designs which give stable operation at very low AT. Another new development is the
combination of multieffect evaporation with multistage flashing (Prob. 4-G) for feed preheat
(see, for example, Howe, 1974).
Dynamic programming has also been applied to optimization of solvent feed to each
stage in crosscurrent multistage extraction (Rudd and Watson, 1968) and to the determination
of the optimum pattern of reflux ratio vs. time in multistage batch distillation (Converse and
Gross, 1963; Coward, 1967).
REFERENCES
Badger, W. L.. and F. C. Standiford (1958): Natl. Acad. Sci. Natl. Res. Counc. Puhl. 568. p. 103.
Converse, A. O., and G. D. Gross (1963): Ind. Eng. Chem. Fundam., 2:217.
Coward, 1. (1967): Chem. Eng. Sci., 22:503.
Howe, E. D. (1974): " Fundamentals of Water Desalination," chap. 9. Dekker. New York.
Itahara. S.. and L. I. Stiel (1968): Ind. Eng. Chem. Process Des. Dev.. 7:6.
King, C. J. (1963): Fresh Water from Sea Water, in T. K. Sherwood. "A Course in Process Design."
chap. 7. M.I.T. Press. Cambridge. Mass.
Peters, M. S., and K. D. Timmerhaus (1968): "Plant Design and Economics for Chemical Engineers."2d
ed.. McGraw-Hill. New York.
Rudd. D. F., and C. C. Watson (1968): "Strategy of Process Engineering," Wiley. New York.
Standiford. F. C.. and H. F. Bjork (1960): ACS Adv. Chem. Ser.. 27:115.
Wilde, D. J., and C. S. Beighller (1967): " Foundations of Optimization." Prentice-Hall. Englewood Cliffs.
N.J.
APPENDIX
c
PROBLEM SPECIFICATION FOR
DISTILLATION
THE DESCRIPTION RULE
As brought out in Chap. 2, the description rule can be used for identifying the number of
variables which must be specified in a problem involving a separation process. For single-stage
separation processes it may seem simpler to list all variables pertaining to the process and
subtract the number of independent equations relating these variables in order to find the
number of independent variables which must be specified. As processes and problems become
more complex, however, the description rule presents a major saving of time over the method
of counting variables and counting equations. This is particularly true for multistage separa-
tion processes (Hanson et al., 1962).
Consider the simple plate-distillation column of Fig. C-l processing a feed of R compon-
ents. The column is equipped with a series of stages above the stage where feed enters (the
rectifying section) and a series of stages below the feed stage (the stripping section). The
numbers of stages in each of these sections are denoted as n and m. respectively. We shall
consider that these stages are equilibrium stages; i.e.. the vapor and liquid leaving each stage
are in equilibrium with each other.
A reboiler and a condenser arc provided. The heat introduced through the reboiler has
been denoted as QK and the heat removed in the condenser as Qc. The condenser is a partial
condenser.
The pressure in the column is governed by a pressure controller, which adjusts a valve on
the overhead product (vapor) line to maintain a predetermined pressure. This fixed pressure is
the st'f point of the pressure controller. In order to ensure that operation will occur at steady
state, two level controllers have been provided. One of these adjusts the rate of reflux return
(or a flow controller governing this rate) so as to hold a constant level (the set point) in the
reflux accumulator drum. The other level controller adjusts the bottoms product rate so as to
hold a constant level in the reboiler. The feed rate, cooling-water rate, and reboiler steam rate
are manually set by means of valves, which are shown.
791
792 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Cooling water Qc
Distillate
Feed
Figure C-l Typical distillation column with partial condenser.
In order to apply the description rule to distillation we want to identify and count the
variables set during construction and operation of the process: (1) It is apparent that we can
arbitrarily set n and m at any values we please during construction of the column. If we pick
specific numbers of equilibrium stages for each of these sections of stages, we have set two
independent variables. (2) We can operate the column of stages at an arbitrarily chosen
pressure by adjusting the set point on the pressure controller. The pressures we can use may be
restricted to values between certain limits, but within these limits we are free to make any
arbitrary choice, and hence the pressure constitutes another independent variable. (3) We can
feed an arbitrarily chosen amount of each of the R components in the feed by altering the feed
composition and adjusting the valve on the feed line. This sets R more independent variables.
(4) We can arbitrarily set the enthalpy of the feed. This could be done, for example, by
adjusting the temperature of the steam in a feed preheater. (5) We can arbitrarily introduce as
much heat as we want into the reboiler by adjusting the steam valve or steam temperature. (6)
PROBLEM SPECIFICATION FOR DISTILLATION 793
Again between limits, we can remove an arbitrary amount of heat from the condenser by
adjusting the cooling-water flow rate. The set points for the liquid levels in the reboiler and
reflux drum are not independent variables. These levels must be kept constant in order for
there to be steady-state operation. The particular level in the reflux drum has no effect on the
separation process, and the particular level in the reboiler can, at most, affect QR, which is
already an independent variable.
If the variables set in construction and operation are noted down, the list is:
Amount of each component in the feed R
Feed enthalpy 1
Pressure 1
Stages above feed entry n 1
Stages below feed entry m 1
Reboiler load QR 1
Condenser load Qc 1
R +6
These R + 6 variables completely describe the process, and if a value is set for each of
them, the separation obtained under these values of the variables is completely determined and
can be calculated.
While counting the number of independent variables by noting down those set by con-
struction and operation is simple, as a practical matter the particular variables developed in
such a list would seldom be set in the description of a given problem. Any or all of them could
be replaced with other independent variables to which we are more interested in assigning
values. In essentially every problem description, however, certain of the variables just listed will
be set, namely, the variables describing the feed and the variable of pressure. If these are
excluded from the variables to be further considered for setting or replacement, the remaining
variables total four: n, m, Qc, QR, independent of the total number of components. Thus, in
describing any distillation problem concerning the column of Fig. C-l, after the feed and
pressure have been set, four more independent variables must be set.
The variables which might be used to replace the four listed above could be (1) separation
variables, (2) flows at some point or points in the process, and (3) temperatures at one or more
points, or in general, any independent variable which characterizes the process. If the column
already existed and we wanted to consider the possibility of using it for a new separation,
a likely problem might be described by assigning values to the four variables
Stages above feed n
Stages below feed m
Recovery fraction of A in top product (/A)D
Concentration of A in top product XA. D
A second common type of problem is the design of a new column. The separation to be
accomplished is specified through two separation variables. A third variable set is usually a
flow at some point, often the ratio of reflux to distillate. The fourth variable set is usually the
location of the feed. Thus the problem could be described by the four variables
(/A)D
(/B)D
Reflux ratio (reflux flow divided by distillate flow)
Feed-stage location
where A and B are two components of the feed.
794 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Cooling water
Feed
Reboiler 1 .
P"
Bottoms product
Figure C-2 Alternate control scheme for distillation column of Fig. C-l.
The number of independent variables which are set during construction and operation
does not depend upon the type of controllers put on the tower. Figure C-2 shows the same
tower as in Fig. C-l, but certain changes have been made in the control scheme. The level
controller now governs the cooling-water flow rate, the reflux flow may be set by a valve or
flow controller, and the reboiler steam rate is controlled by a signal from a thermocouple
measuring the temperature of the second stage from the bottom. In this scheme the condenser
must be overdesigned. Aside from pressure and feed variables, the following variables have
now been set by construction and external means:
Stages above the feed n
Stages below the feed m
Temperature of second stage T2
Reflux flow rate r
PROBLEM SPECIFICATION FOR DISTILLATION 795
The number of independent variables has not changed. For example. Qc and QR can no longer
be independently set by adjusting valves, but T2 can now be held at a determinate set point
(within limits), and r can now be adjusted independently by means of the valve. There are still
four additional independent variables. Other control schemes could be shown, all with the
same result.
Our approach to the description rule so far has involved the assumption of equilibrium
stages; yet if we build five plates in a distillation column we do not necessarily obtain the
action of five equilibrium stages. The degree of equilibration of the vapor and liquid stage exit
streams will depend upon such factors as the flow patterns on the plate, the intimacy of contact
provided between vapor and liquid, etc. However, we are justified in saying that we have
provided through construction the action of n equilibrium stages above the feed stage and the
action of m equilibrium stages below the feed stage; n and m are numbers of equivalent
equilibrium stages rather than the actual number of plates provided.
TOTAL CONDENSER VS. PARTIAL CONDENSER
If the column of Fig. C-l is changed by using a total condenser at the top rather than a partial
condenser, the column shown in Fig. C-3 results. If the variables defining the feed and the
pressure are considered set, the remaining variables are found to be
Equilibrium stages above feed stage n
Equilibrium stages below feed stage m
Reboiler heat duty QK
Condenser heat duty Qc
Reflux flow rate r
Here the remaining variables number five, compared with four for the same column using a
partial condenser. In Fig. C-3 it is apparent that the liquid flow leaving the condenser can be
split in any desired ratio by adjusting the valve in the reflux line. With a partial condenser, on
the other hand, the ratio of distillate to reflux is set by the percent vapor in the total stream
leaving the condenser. Thus in a problem description for a distillation column with a total
condenser one more variable must be set independently than for a problem where a column
has a partial condenser.
A certain amount of consideration reveals that the five variables for a column with a total
condenser cannot all be replaced by separation variables or by other variables which influence
the separation. This results from the fact that the amount of reflux and the amount of heat
removed in the condenser are both controlling only one variable which affects the fractiona-
tion, namely, the internal liquid flow in the section of the column above the feed; r and Qc are
not independent of each other. One can increase the internal liquid flow either by increasing
the reflux flow rate or by increasing the condenser duty while holding the rate of reflux return
from the accumulator drum constant. In the latter case the reflux would become cooler and
would produce more internal liquid flow when equilibrating with the vapor on the top stage.
Hence, if one of these two variables were changed to change the fractionation, the other
variable could be changed in reverse direction to return the fractionation to its original
condition. This is not true of any other pair of variables we have listed for the case of a total
condenser.
Five variables must be set to describe a problem for the column of Fig. C-3 nevertheless.
Since all the five listed cannot be replaced with variables which independently affect the
fractionation, it is necessary to set at least one variable associated with the condenser load or
the reflux. Often this is done by simply specifying the temperature of the reflux, normally with
7% SEPARATION PROCESSES
Cooling water Qc
Bleed or
inert gas
Feed fc
' Reflux
r accumulator
Bottoms product
Figure C-3 Distillation column with a total condenser.
the statement that the reflux will be liquid at its saturation temperature or at some other set
temperature.
RESTRICTIONS ON SUBSTITUTIONS AND RANGES OF VARIABLES
There are several other restrictions on the process of substituting variables. An obvious one,
already mentioned, is that some prospective independent variables can be varied only within
limits. For instance, in the column of Fig. C-l with a partial condenser the product streams
leave as thermodynamically saturated streams. As a result the overall enthalpy balance with a
given feed will limit the extent to which Qc and QR can change with respect to each other. Also
the distillate rate cannot exceed the feed rate. The number of stages cannot be less than the
minimum for the desired separation, nor can the reflux ratio or boil-up ratio be less than the
minimum, etc.
PROBLEM SPECIFICATION FOR DISTILLATION 797
In principle, more than two separation variables can be set in the problem description
(Forsyth, 1970), but this is difficult since any separation variables beyond the first two will be
bounded within a narrow range. For example, with a four-component feed one can readily set
recovery fractions for two of the components, i.e., the keys, but setting a recovery fraction for a
third component, e.g., a nonkey, can only be made within the narrow range of possible
distributions for that component, given the set recovery fractions for the first two components
and all combinations of reflux ratio and number of stages (see Distribution of Nonkey Com-
ponents in Chap. 9).
If the feed rate is set, we cannot substitute bot h b and D as additional independent variables.
Once F and b are specified, D is immediately fixed by overall mass balance. Any variables
uniquely related by a single equation or subset of equations cannot be specified independently.
The feed rate or some capacity variable (a rate per unit time) must remain as an indepen-
dent variable or else the list of independent variables will be reduced by 1. The quality of
separation obtained is independent of the capacity if there are equilibrium stages. In the case of
the column of Fig. C-l we could specify the separation completely through the following list
of variables, although the capacity would be indeterminate.
Feed composition -( R - 1
Feed specific enthalpy hF/F 1
Pressure P 1
Stages above feed stage n 1
Stages below feed stage m 1
Reboiler duty per unit feed QR/F 1
Condenser duty per unit feed QC/F 1
By eliminating all variables having to do with the actual capacity of the column for
processing feed (number of moles processed per unit time) we have reduced the number of
independent variables by 1 from R + 6 to R + 5. Note that there are only R â 1 feed composi-
tion variables since lr, must equal 1.0.
OTHER APPROACHES AND OTHER SEPARATIONS
The method of counting variables and counting equations has been applied to distillation by
Gilliland and Reed (1942) and Kwauk (1956), the results giving the same number of indepen-
dent variables as the description rule. The method of counting variables and equations is also
covered in the first edition of this book, along with examples of applications to several other
types of separations.
REFERENCES
Forsyth. J. S. (1970): Ind. Eng. Chem. Fundam.. 9:507.
Gilliland. E. R., and C. E. Reed (1942): Ind. Eng Chem., 34:551.
Hanson. D. N.. J. H. Duffin, and G. F. Somerville (1962): "Computation of Multistage Separation
Processes," chap. 1, Reinhold, New York.
Kwauk. M. (1956): AIChE J.. 2:240.
APPENDIX
D
OPTIMUM DESIGN OF DISTILLATION
PROCESSES
In the design of a distillation column it is necessary to fix values of a complete set of indepen-
dent variables. The feed variables are normally already known, and so, typically, it is necessary
to pick near-optimum values of the reflux ratio, the column pressure, the column diameter,
and the product purities. For any set of values of these additional independent variables it is
then possible to determine the number of stages, etc., by the techniques outlined in this book.
Depending upon the situation, the optimum value of one or several of these independent
variables can be determined in the course of the design.
COST DETERMINATION
Costs associated with a distillation column itself are presented by Miller and Kapella (1977).
Costs for bubble-cap columns and references for other sources of costs are given by Woods
(1975). Costs of column auxiliaries (condensers, reboilers, etc.) and various other separation
equipment are covered by Guthrie (1969). In all cases sources of costs should be updated by
means of the cost indexes for plant, equipment, chemicals, construction, etc., reported biweekly
in Chemical Engineering.
OPTIMUM REFLUX RATIO
Peters and Timmerhaus (1968) give an example of the determination of the optimum reflux
ratio for a binary distillation with set feed conditions, a set pressure, and set product
specifications. The specified conditions are:
798
OPTIMUM DESIGN OF DISTILLATION PROCESSES 799
Feed rate = 700 Ib mol/h
Feed thermal condition = saturated liquid
Feed composition = 45 mol °0 benzene, 55 mol °0 toluene
Column pressure = 1 atm
Distillate composition = 92 mol "â benzene
Bottoms composition = 5 mol °0 benzene
Average cooling-water temp in condenser = 90°F
Gain in cooling-water temp in condenser = 50°F
Steam to reboiler = saturated, at 60 lb/in2 abs
Max allowable vapor velocity in tower = 2.5 ft/s
Stage efficiency = 70°n (overall)
The column is to contain bubble-cap trays and will operate with a total condenser returning
saturated liquid reflux. Constant heat-transfer coefficients are assumed for the reboiler
(80 Btu/h-ft2-°F) and the condenser (100 Btu/h-ft2-°F).
Purchase and installation costs are considered for the column itself and for the reboiler
and condenser. The unit is to operate 8500 h/year (97 percent time on stream), and the annual
fixed charges for depreciation, maintenance, interest, etc., amount to 15 percent of the total
cost for installed equipment counting piping, instrumentation, and insulation. The annual
operating costs are for steam (50 cents per 1000 Ib) and for cooling water (0.36 cent per
1000 Ib). Other costs, such as labor, are presumed to be unaffected by the choice of reflux ratio
in the column.
The remaining variable to be set in order to describe the column completely is the reflux
ratio. This is chosen as the optimum value, defined as that value of reflux ratio which causes the
total variable annual cost (annual fixed charges plus annual operating costs) to be a minimum.
The results of computations of column size and of the various contributions to the total
variable annual cost for different values of the reflux ratio are shown in Table D-l and
Fig. D-l.
Several trends in Table D-l should be emphasized. As the reflux ratio increases above the
minimum, the number of plates required in the column becomes less, since the operating lines
Table D-l. Individual costs contributing to total variable annual cost for benzene-
toluene distillation example
Annual cost
Number of
Fixed charges
Operating
Total
Reflux
plates
diameter.
Cooling
annual
ratio
required
ft
Column
Condenser
Reboiler
water
Steam
cost
1.14
00
6.7
S oo
SI 870
$3960
$5780
$44,300
$ oo
12
29
6.8
8930
1910
4040
5940
45,500
66,320
1.3
800 SEPARATION PROCESSES
KH).(XX)
80.000
= 60.0M
"O
i
u
1 40.000
20.000
0
Steam and cooling-water costs (1)
I
Z
Minimum reflux ratio
II
Charges on equipment (2)
-Optimum reflux ratio
Ii
1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0
Reflux ratio, moles liquid returned to column/mole of distillate
Figure D-l Total variable annual cost for benzene-toluene distillation as a function of reflux ratio. (From
Peters and Timmerhaus, 1968, p. 312: used by permission.)
are moving away from the equilibrium curve. Column costs are directly proportional to the
number of plates (Peters and Timmerhaus, 1968). The column diameter, on the other hand,
increases since the reflux ratio and hence the vapor rate through the column are increasing.
Despite the increase in column diameter, the annual fixed cost for the column goes down as
the reflux increases because the saving in tower height more than offsets the increase in
diameter. This will not continue to be the case as reflux increases, however. At very high reflux
ratios the plate requirement approaches a constant value characteristic of the minimum stage
requirement, while the diameter continues to increase; hence at some reflux ratio higher than
those shown in Table D-l the annual fixed charges for the column will begin to rise again.
The annual fixed charges for the reboiler and the condenser and the annual operating
costs for steam and cooling water all rise in proportion to the vapor rate in the column (the
fixed charges rise less rapidly because the installed costs of the heat exchangers are propor-
tional to the exchanger duty to a power less than unity). Hence the optimization in this case
reflects a balance between the annual fixed charges for the column, which decrease from
infinity as reflux increases in this range, and the fixed charges and operating costs associated
with the heat exchangers, which increase toward infinity as reflux increases. A minimum total
annual cost exists at an intermediate reflux ratio.
In this case the minimum occurs at a reflux ratio of about 1.25. The minimum reflux ratio,
as shown in Table D-l, is 1.14; hence the minimum total variable annual cost occurs at a reflux
ratio 1.10 times the minimum.
It is very important, however, to notice the shape of the cost-vs.-reflux curve in Fig. D-l.
The curve rises steeply and suddenly toward infinity at reflux ratios less than the optimum; in
fact, the cost must become infinite at a reflux ratio just 10 percent less than the optimum. On
the other hand, the curve rises much more slowly at reflux ratios above the optimum, and one
OPTIMUM DESIGN OF DISTILLATION PROCESSES 801
could design at 1.20 to 1.30 times the minimum reflux and still have a total variable annual
cost that was only 2 to 6 percent greater than that at the optimum reflux ratio.
Another point from Table D-l should also be brought out. The single most important
variable cost at the optimum reflux conditions is the operating cost for reboiler steam, which
contributes some 70 percent of the total variable annual cost. This result is general for steam-
driven water-cooled columns; the steam costs are usually an order of magnitude larger than
the coolant costs. With refrigerated-overhead subambient-temperature columns, the refrigera-
tion costs usually will be dominant.
Heaven (1969) used typical economic conditions for the 1960s to find the optimum reflux
ratio for 70 different hydrocarbon distillations carried out at atmospheric pressure or above.
Except for two towers with minimum reflux ratios under 0.2, he found the optimum reflux to
be between 1.11 and 1.24 times the minimum in all cases. Brian (1972) reports a calculation of
optimum reflux ratio for an atmospheric benzene-toluene distillation with a steam cost of 70
cents per 1000 Ib and obtains an optimum 1.17 times the minimum. Fair and Bolles (1968)
present calculated results for three cases, all giving an optimum reflux less than 1.1 times the
minimum. Van Winkle and Todd (1971) evaluated a large number of cases and concluded that
the optimum reflux ratio lay between 1.1 and 1.6 times the minimum, lower multiples of the
minimum being favored by high relative volatilities and/or nonsevere separation
specifications. Conversely, relative volatilities closer to unity and sharper separations led to
higher ratios of optimum reflux ratio to minimum reflux ratio, within that range.
Costs of steam and other forms of energy have risen much more than materials costs in
the years since these calculations were made. Typical steam costs for 1978 are in the range of
$1.50 to $4 per 1000 Ib. The percentage increase in steam costs being substantially greater than
the percentage increase in materials cost means that optimum reflux ratios have become a still
smaller multiple of the minimum reflux ratio. Tedder and Rudd (1978) considered an equimo-
lar isobutane-w-butane distillation and found the optimum reboiler boil-up ratio to be 1.11
and 1.03 times the minimum for steam costs of $0.44 and $4.40 per 1000 Ib, respectively. The
corresponding reflux ratios should be very nearly the same as the boil-up ratios for this case.
It is safe to say that optimum reflux ratios in the late 1970s tend to be less than 1.10 times
the minimum, on the basis of calculations like those leading to Table D-l and Fig. D-l.
However, under these circumstances precise knowledge of vapor-liquid equilibrium becomes
very important because cost curves, for example, Fig. D-l, rise so sharply as the minimum
reflux is approached. Changes in the vapor-liquid equilibrium data used change the minimum
reflux ratio. Similarly, errors in the stage efficiency or changes in feed composition can change
the reflux ratio needed to accomplish a given separation with a fixed number of stages.
Consequently, when there is uncertainty in the vapor-liquid equilibrium data, the stage
efficiency, and/or the feed composition, it is best to design for a reflux ratio somewhat higher
than the economic optimum found by this sort of analysis. Optimum overdesign is discussed
later in this appendix.
Higher energy costs, in particular the need for refrigeration overhead, lead to optimum
reflux ratios closer to the minimum. On the other hand, more expensive materials of construc-
tion, more severe separations, greater rates of equipment write-off, and/or relative volatilities
closer to 1 all lead to higher optimum reflux ratios.
OPTIMUM PRODUCT PURITIES AND RECOVERY FRACTIONS
Often the product purities to be achieved in a distillation column will be determined by the
specifications imposed upon marketable material by the buyers. Thus, for example, in ethylene
production the purity required in the product ethylene and the different allowable levels of
802 SEPARATION PROCESSES
various impurities in the product are set by the needs of the consumers of the ethylene. On the
other hand, the recovery fraction of product material to be obtained is frequently subject to an
economic optimization. Taking the production of ethylene as an example again, the final
distillation separates ethylene from ethane (see. for example. Fig. 13-28). The ethylene is
product, subject to imposed purity specifications, but the ethane is to be recycled for thermal
cracking. The recovery fraction of ethylene in the overhead product is related to internal plant
economics and reflects the increased value of ethylene in the product as opposed to the value
of recycled ethylene.
Example D-l Suppose that the benzene product purity in the foregoing benzene-toluene distillation
example is held by consumer specification to 92 mole percent but that the recovery fraction of
ben/ene overhead (and hence the bottoms purity) may vary subject to an optimization. The toluene
product will be used for gasoline blending. The increased value of benzene in the product as opposed
to benzene returned to fuel is 2 cents per gallon. Using the same economic factors as in the optimum-
reflux-ratio example, find the optimum recovery fraction of benzene in the overhead product. Make
simplifications where appropriate.
SOLUTION Because the recovery fraction of benzene in the distillate probably will be relatively high.
we shall assume that the relative flows of the products remain very nearly the same as in the
optimum-reflux-ratio example. The overhead composition remains the same, and hence the mini-
mum reflux ratio remains the same. The optimization will reflect an economic balance between the
value of recovered benzene, on the one hand, and the additional plates in the stripping section
required to recover that benzene, on the other. Reboiler, condenser, steam, and cooling water costs
will not vary.
As a base case we shall take the solution in Table D-l for a reflux ratio of 1.3 (about 15 percent
above the minimum). The column cost for the base case (5 mol "â benzene in the bottoms) is S6620
per year for 21 plates, or S315 per plate. Since the overall stage efficiency is 70 percent, the annual
cost per equilibrium stage is S3 15 0.70 = S450.
Recovered benzene is worth an additional 2 cents per gallon, or since the density is 0.879 (Perry
and Chilton, 1973). and the molecular weight is 78.
(S0.02 gal)(78 Iblb mol)
Value of recovered benzene = L LJ _._ J = S0.2! ,b mo,
The base case bottoms flow rate is 378 Ib mol h. With X500 operating hours per year, the value of
each incremental mole percent benzene removed from the bottoms is
Value of each mol "â benzene removed
= ($0.21/lb mol)(378 Ib mol h)(8500 h/y)(0.01 mol "â mole fraction)
= S6800 y
This calculation neglects the small changes in product flows as the bottoms composition changes.
The variable number of stages for recovering benzene will come at the low-benzene-mole-
fraction end of the column, where the relative volatility is nearly constant. At the boiling point of
toluene the relative volatility of benzene to toluene is 2.38 (Maxwell. 1950). Since the operating line
and equilibrium curve are both nearly straight in this region, it is probably simplest to use the KSB
equations [Eqs. (8-15) and (8-16)]. Some complication arises due to the fact that the base point for the
stripping-section operating lines will shift from case to case, causing changes higher in the column:
however, this will be a secondary effect. To allow for it we shall compute the stage requirement up to
VB = 0.10 for each case.
Since the overhead product rate is 322 Ib mol h. the reflux ratio of 1.3 corresponds to a vapoi
flow of 322 (1 + 1.3)= 740.6 Ib mol 'hand a liquid flow of 1 118.6 Ib mol h below the feed. Hence tht
value of ml' "L in the zone of variable stages is
m\" _ 2.38(740.6) _
~L = "~~~ " '
OPTIMUM DESIGN OF DISTILLATION PROCESSES 803
We can use the solution of the KSB equation presented in Fig. 8-3 if we convert y to .x, L to V, and m
to 1/m. Hence the vertical axis becomes
When we denote the bottoms composition by .XB and take a fixed upper mole fraction of 0.10, this
group becomes
.XB - (l/2.38).xB 1.38.xB
0.10 - {l/2.38).xB 0.238 - .\B
The parameter on Fig. 8-3 is now mV'/L, or 1.54.
Taking as a base case ,XB = 0.05, we can compute the following table of additional equilibrium-
stage requirements vs. bottoms composition:
of equilibrium
Variable annual costs
Additional
1.38.xB
stages.
Additional
Additional
benzene
**
0.238 - ,XB
N
equilibrium stages
plates
recovery
Total
0.05
0.369
1.1
0
S0
S0
S0
0.02
0.126
2.9
1.8
800
-20,400
-19.600
0.01
0.061
4.5
3.4
1500
-27,200
-25,700
0.005
0.021
6.8
5.7
2600
-30.600
-28.000
0.002
0.0085
8.6
7.5
3400
-32.640
-29.240
0.001
0.0042
10.2
9.1
4100
-33,320
-29,220
0.0005
0.0021
12.0
804 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Operation at pressures substantially above atmospheric requires that the column shell be
thicker to withstand the pressure. Also, it is a general characteristic of distillation systems that
the relative volatility becomes closer to unity as the system pressure increases; consequently
plate and reflux requirements for a given quality of separation increase as pressure increases.
In nearly all cases these factors more than offset the savings in tower diameter which can
accrue from the higher vapor density and lower volumetric vapor flow rate at higher pressure.
Hence high-pressure operation is usually justified only in situations where the high-pressure
operation is needed to allow condensation of the overhead stream with cooling water or where
refrigeration is required for overhead condensation anyhow.
The foregoing analysis leads to the conclusion that the column pressure for distillation
should be slightly above atmospheric as long as the condensation overhead can be accom-
plished with cooling water and the reboiling can be accomplished with ordinary heating media
without thermal damage to the bottoms material. If high pressure (up to perhaps 250 Ib/in2
abs) is necessary to enable condensation of the overhead with cooling water, the column
pressure should ordinarily be such as to give an average temperature difference driving force of
5 to 15°C in the overhead condenser. Heaven (1969) examined economically optimum column
pressures for 70 hydrocarbon distillations requiring pressures in this range and found this
criterion to be generally true.
If the column pressure required to accomplish overhead condensation with cooling water
is above 250 Ib/in2 abs, it is worth considering the alternative of using a refrigerant on the
overhead and running the column at a lower pressure. In this case an optimization calculation
may be useful, the variable being the column pressure or the refrigerant temperature.
Griffin (1966) has given the results of a determination of the optimum pressure for an
ethylene-ethane distillation, operated using the vapor recompression scheme of Fig. \3-\6b.
The conditions of the problem are shown in Table D-2.
The optimization calculation allows for variable operating costs for refrigeration and
compressor power and for the fixed charges on the column, the compressors, and the various
heat exchangers. The relative volatility of ethylene to ethane increases from 1.4 to 1.6 at a
tower pressure of 250 Ib/in2 abs to 1.7 to 2.0 at a pressure of 80 Ib/in2 abs. The optimization
represents a balance of the reflux and stages saving due to this higher relative volatility against
the refrigeration and materials costs of low temperatures, along with several other factors. The
annual cost figures reported include constant contributors to the cost, i.e., labor, as well as the
variable costs.
The cost of the separation, expressed as cents per pound of ethylene produced, is shown as
a function of pressure in Fig. D-2. Contributions to the purchased equipment costs and annual
operating costs at various pressures are shown in Table D-3. The tower costs are computed by
allowing different materials of construction for plates at different locations in the tower. Even
so. there are discontinuities in the product cost. The discontinuity at about 160 to 175 Ib/in2
abs tower pressure is associated with the change in the material of construction for the reboiler
from ordinary carbon steel to killed carbon steel as the temperature in the reboiler drops
below -20°F at pressures below 160 Ib/in2 abs, and with the change in the material for the
overhead vapor compressor from killed carbon steel to 3i"0 nickel steel as the overhead vapor
drops below â 50°F at pressures below 175 Ib/in2 abs. There is also a discontinuity in the cost
function at about 94 Ib/in2 abs, as the material for the reboiler goes from killed carbon steel to
3i°'0 nickel steel.
The purchased tower cost decreases with increasing pressure. This trend reflects the
saving due to less expensive materials of construction as the tower goes from all 3-J",, nickel
steel at 80 Ib/in2 abs to 70 percent of the trays being ordinary carbon steel and the remainder
being killed carbon steel at 250 Ib/in2 abs. This saving offsets the greater plate requirement
caused by the lower relative volatility at higher pressures. The reboiler purchased cost be-
OPTIMUM DESIGN OF DISTILLATION PROCESSES 805
Table D-2. Conditions for optimum-pressure example
Feed:
Flow rate 41,500 Ib/h
Composition 32.5 wt°n ethylene, 67.5 wt",, ethane
Condition Satd liquid at 290 lb/in2 abs
Ethylene:
Product purity 98 wt %
Product delivery pressure 500 lb/in2 abs
Recovery Traction 0.97
Temperature difference across reboilert 14°F
Compressor efficiencies^ 0.65
Materials of construction:
Above â 20°F Ordinary carbon steel
-20 to -SOT Killed carbon steel
Below -50°F Nickel steel, 3£%
Levels of refrigeration available
Temp, °F
Annual cost,
per 10* Btu/h
Propane
60
$ 3,700
18
7,000
0
8,600
-34
10,600
Ethylene
-90
14,000
-150
16,600
t Condensing ethylene to evaporating ethane.
J (Isentropic work)/(actual work).
Source: Data from Griffin (1966).
comes less whenever an increase in pressure allows a less expensive material but rises with
pressure for any given material of construction because the lower relative volatility at higher
pressures increases the reflux and boilup requirements. The overhead-vapor compressor cost
increases with increasing tower pressure because the overhead-vapor flow rate becomes
greater at the higher reflux ratios, but there is a drop in compressor cost when the transition
from 3i"0 nickel steel to killed carbon steel becomes possible at 175 lb/in2 abs. The product
compressor cost is less at higher tower pressures because a smaller compression ratio is
required to bring the product up to 500 lb/in2 abs.
The utilities costs in the second half of Table D-3 are composed of costs for refrigerant in
the desuperheater, for power to drive the product compressor, and for steam to drive the
overhead-vapor compressor. The other factors making up the annual operating costs vary in
near proportion to the purchased equipment costs. Notice that the overhead-vapor compres-
sor is the largest single purchased item of equipment in cost. The purchased cost of this
compressor and the desuperheater along with the utilities cost for the compressor drive and
refrigerant for the desuperheater (78 percent of the utilities costs between them) can be at-
tributed to refrigeration for condensation of the overhead vapor. If the vapor-recompression
system were not used, these units would be replaced by an expensive refrigeration system. Thus
0.38 iâ
0.36
3 0.34
â
O
u.
D.
.O
S 0.32
o
0.30
0.28
0.26
50
I(K)
150
200
250
Tower pressure, psia
Figure D-2 Effect of distillation pressure on cost of ethylene recovery from an ethylene-ethane mixture
(Adapted from Griffin, 1966, p. 16; used by permission.)
Table D-3. Contributions to ethylene recovery costs (data from Griffin, 1966)
Tower operating pressure, lb/ir
2 abs
Purchased equipment costs:
SO
100
125
150
200
250
Distillation tower
S 68,800
$ 65,000
$ 60.500
$ 54,800
$ 46,820
$ 46.000
Reboiler
72,500
50,000
51,500
56.200
43,000
47.500
Desuperheater (refrigerated
cooler)
13.750
9,450
6.740
6,900
8,150
9.300
Vapor compressor (entire
overhead vapor)
135,000
135.000
136.500
137,250
134.400
138.300
Product compressor (ethylene
product)
30,650
27.300
23.700
19,100
9.240
0
Instruments
OPTIMUM DESIGN OF DISTILLATION PROCESSES 807
this example bears out the earlier statement that refrigeration costs are usually dominant in
columns operating with a refrigerated overhead.
From Fig. D-2 it would appear that the optimum pressure is just above 175 lb/in2 abs. In
actuality it would probably be better to choose a higher pressure, such as 200 lb/in2 abs, so
that temperature fluctuations during operation will not impose a materials-damage problem
in the killed-carbon-steel overhead-vapor compressor.
The optimum operating pressure in ethylene-ethane fractionators is also discussed by
Davison and Hays (1958); the optimum pressure and reflux ratio for propylene-propane
fractionators is discussed by Smy and Hay (1963); and the optimum pressure for distillation of
isobutane from n-butane is discussed by Tedder and Rudd (1978).
OPTIMUM PHASE CONDITION OF FEED
Feed preheating, including partial or complete vaporization of the feed, reduces the required
reboiler heating load but not in direct compensation since the vapor generated in a preheater
is used only in the rectifying section. The extent to which feed preheating is advantageous, if at
all, depends upon the relative costs of the heating media that could be used in the preheater
and the reboiler. Tedder and Rudd (1978) have examined the optimum degree of feed preheat-
ing for an isobutane-n-butane distillation. Petterson and Wells (1977) also consider optimum
levels of feed preheat.
OPTIMUM COLUMN DIAMETER
The column diameter for distillation is almost always set through a design heuristic rather
than through an optimization calculation. In principle, it is possible to determine an optimum
diameter by balancing savings due to a smaller diameter against the additional plate require-
ment resulting from a lower stage efficiency caused by entrainment and/or flooding. The result
of such an optimization, however, would be a diameter giving a vapor rate where entrainment
was relatively large or where the operation was quite close to flooding. Such a design would
give a tower with poor operating flexibility. Because of unavoidable fluctuations in conditions
during operation, the tower would have a tendency toward frequent floodings or gross losses
of efficiency. So as to give operating flexibility to guard against this behavior, column
diameters are usually selected to give a safe distance between the design conditions and the
ultimate capacity limit. Common practice for plate columns is to set the column diameter to
give a vapor velocity equal to 70 to 85 percent of that at the flooding or entrainment limit. A
lower percentage is commonly used for packed columns.
OPTIMUM TEMPERATURE DIFFERENCES IN REBOILERS
AND CONDENSERS
Reboiler temperatures should be kept low enough to avoid bottoms degradation and/or fouling.
The general levels of reboiler and condenser temperatures reflect the pressure chosen for a dis-
tillation column. Common temperature differences used for heat exchange across reboilers and
condensers (Frank, 1977) are:
808 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Temp, K
Condenser:
Refrigeration
Cooling water
Pressurized fluid
3-10
6 20
10 20
Boiling water
Air
20-40
20-50
Reboiler:
Process fluid
10-20
Steam
10-60
Hot oil
20-60
Source: Data from Frank, 1977.
OPTIMUM OVERDESIGN
The design of separation equipment is complicated by uncertainties in the phase equilibrium
data and in the stage efficiencies. One approach to this difficulty is to adopt a conservative
design, using the most pessimistic estimates of the equilibrium relationship and the stage
efficiency. This usually results in a considerably overdesigned device, however, and a more
common approach is to carry out the design for the best estimates of the equilibrium and
efficiency and then apply an overdesign factor to the number of stages and/or the capacity
parameters to allow for the uncertainty. For a distillation column the numbers of plates
provided and/or the column diameter could be increased by whatever factor is chosen.
There have been some attempts to use probability analysis to determine what amount of
overdesign is best. Villadsen (1968) applied such an analysis to find the amount of overdesign
of distillation columns warranted by uncertainties in the stage efficiency. The approach is to
assume that the stage efficiency may have any value between a given lower limit and a given
upper limit once the column is built and that no one efficiency within this range has a greater
probability of occurring than any other. The yearly cost of the separation (including both
operating costs and fixed charges for equipment) is then related to the number of plates in the
tower N, the overhead reflux ratio R, and the stage efficiency £. This annual cost is denoted by
U(N, R. E). There is an interrelationship between the reflux, the number of plates and the
efficiency, however, such that the reflux should be that amount which is required to give the
specified product purities with the prevailing values of N and £, assuming that N is still above
Nmin. Hence the cost can be considered to be a function of only two independent variables
U(N, E). The expected cost 0(N) can now be defined as the sum of the costs for each possible
value of the stage efficiency, weighted by the probability p(£) of that stage efficiency's
occurring:
U(N) = | U(N, E)p(E) dE (D-l)
The optimum number of plates to provide in the column would then be the value of N which
makes U(N) in Eq. (D-l) a minimum.
Figure D-3 shows the results giving the optimum overdesign factor as a function of the
range of the uncertainty in the stage efficiency. This result is relatively insensitive to the mean
level of the efficiency, the relative volatility, the recovery fractions, and the percentage annual
amortization of the equipment costs. The overdesign factor in Fig. D-3 is defined as the
OPTIMUM DESIGN OF DISTILLATION PROCESSES 809
4
c.
o
1.5
1.4
1.3
1.1
Range of results for different-
values of design parameters
a = range of uncertainty in stage efficiency, percent
(Efficiency = £â ± ^ '7,1
Figure D-3 Optimal overdesign factor for number of plates in a distillation tower. (After Villadsen. 1968.)
number of plates determined as the optimum by minimizing Eq. (D-l), divided by the number
of plates which would be indicated if the efficiency were known with certainty to be equal to
the mean of the lower and upper limits on stage efficiency. This analysis as presented by Rudd
and Watson (1968) implies that the diameter of the tower can be varied or. more realistically,
that the tower capacity can be varied. Presumably a similar analysis could be used to obtain an
optimum overdesign factor for the column diameter.
Lashmet and Szczepanski (1974) compared observed stage efficiencies for a large number
of real distillation columns with the predictions of the AIChE method for stage efficiencies
(Chap. 12), thereby obtaining an estimate of the uncertainty in predicting stage efficiencies.
They used these results to determine the overdesign in number of plates required to give 90
percent confidence of achieving the desired separation with 1.3 times the minimum reflux ratio.
Overdesign factors ranged from 1.07 to 1.16 for typical conditions.
In addition to uncertainties in the stage efficiency and the vapor-liquid equilibrium data
there also will be uncertainties in the vapor-handling capacity of a column of given diameter,
in the vapor-generation capacity of a reboiler of given size, and in the vapor-condensation
capacity of a condenser of given size. Saletan (1969) indicated how these last three uncertain-
ties can be combined with the stage-efficiency uncertainty to give the probability distribution
of the feed-handling capacity of a column of given size which must make products of specified
purity. The vapor-handling capacity of a distillation system can be limited by either the
reboiler or the column diameter or the condenser, the one with the least vapor capacity
providing the limit. Hence the probability P that the vapor-handling capacity of a distillation
810 SEPARATION PROCESSES
system is greater than some specified value is given by the product of three probabilities.
P = Prcb PCoi Pcon â The terms Preb, Pco,, and Pcoâ are the probabilities that the vapor-handling
capacities of the reboiler, column, and condenser, respectively, are greater than the specified
value. The probability distribution for the stage efficiency can be converted into a probability
distribution for the reflux ratio required to accomplish the specified separation with the set
number of plates. Once again, there may be a finite probability that the separation cannot be
attained at all because of the minimum-stages limitation. The probability distribution of
vapor-handling capacities for the distillation system can then be combined with the probabi-
lity distribution of required reflux ratios to give the probability distribution for the feed-
handling capacity of the distillation system. One might then ensure that there is an 80, 90, 95,
or 98 percent probability that the distillation system can handle the desired feed capacity.
REFERENCES
Brian. P. L. T. (1972): "Staged Cascades in Chemical Processing." Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
Davison, J. W., and G. E. Hays (1958): Chem. Eng. Prog.. 54(12): 52.
Fair, J. R., and W. L. Bolles (1968): Chem. Eng., Apr. 22, p. 156.
Frank, O. (1977): Chem. Eng., Mar. 14, p. 111.
Gawin, A. F. (1975): M.S. thesis in chemical engineering, University of California, Berkeley.
Griffin, J. D. (1966): first-prize-winning solution for 1959, in "Student Contest Problems and First-Prize-
Winning Solutions, 1959-65," American Institute of Chemical Engineers. New York.
Guthrie. K. M. (1969): Chem. Eng.. Mar. 24, p. 114.
Heaven. D. L. (1969): M.S. thesis in chemical engineering. University of California. Berkeley.
Lashmet, P. K., and S. Z. Szczepanski (1974): Ind. Eng. Chem. Process Des. Dei., 13:103.
Maxwell. J. B. (1950): "Data Book on Hydrocarbons," Van Nostrand. Princeton, N.J.
Miller, J. Sâ and W. A. Kapella (1977): Chem. Eng., Apr. 11. p. 129.
Perry. R. H. and C. H. Chilton (1973): "Chemical Engineers' Handbook." 5th ed., McGraw-Hill. New-
York.
Peters. M. S., and K. D. Timmerhaus (1968): "Plant Design and Economics for Chemical Engineers." 2d
ed.. McGraw-Hill, New York.
Petterson, W. C, and T. A. Wells (1977): Chem. Eng., Sept. 26, p. 79.
Rudd. D. F., and C. C. Watson (1968): "Strategy of Process Engineering." Wiley, New York.
Saletan, D. I. (1969): Chem. Eng. Prog., 65(5): 80.
Smy, K. G., and J. M. Hay (1963): Can. J. Chem. Eng.. 41:39.
Tedder, D. Wâ and D. F. Rudd (1978): AIChE J., 24:303, 316.
Van Winkle. M., and W. G. Todd (1971): Chem. Eng.. Sept. 20, p. 136.
Villadsen. J. (1968): cited in D. F. Rudd and C. C. Watson, "Strategy of Process Engineering," Wiley, New
York.
Woods, D. R. (1975): "Financial Decision Making in the Process Industry," p. 172, Prentice-Hall
Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
APPENDIX
E
SOLVING BLOCK-TRIDIAGONAL SETS OF
LINEAR EQUATIONS;
BASIC DISTILLATION PROGRAM
In this appendix the form of block-tridiagonal matrices and the types of equations for which
they are applicable are outlined. An efficient computer program (BAND) is given for solving
these systems of equations. Finally, a simple distillation program, using the block-tridiagonal-
matrix solution, is presented. The approach and programs are those developed by Newman
(1967, 1968, 1973).
BLOCK-TRIDIAGONAL MATRICES
Block-tridiagonal matrices can be generated from sets of simultaneous linear difference equa-
tions in several unknowns written for successive positions. In order to become block-
tridiagonal, the equations must involve unknowns at only the position in question and the two
adjacent positions. This condition is met in countercurrent-staged and continuous-contactor
separation processes.
If there is only one unknown variable to be evaluated at each position, only one equation
is written for each position, relating the values of the unknowns at that position and the two
adjacent positions. In that case the equations become a simple tridiagonal set, given by
Eqs. (10-22). The solution can then be made efficiently by the Thomas method, outlined in
Eqs. (10-23) to (10-30).
Generalization of the tridiagonal matrix to the case where there are n unknowns to be
evaluated at each position (and n simultaneous equations at each position) leads to the
block-tridiagonal matrix. Extension of the Thomas method from tridiagonal to block-
tridiagonal matrices leads to the highly efficient BAND method presented here.
A block-tridiagonal system of equations takes the form
I A.I. *0')Ck(j - 1) + Bi. k(j)CtU) + D, t(j)Ck(j + 1) = G,(j) (E-l)
t=i
Here the n unknowns are C] C\,..., Cnat each position, j = 1,2,... ,./â,â. This amounts to
njm,K total unknowns. The subscript i refers to the equation number, i = 1, 2 n, again at
811
812 SEPARATION PROCESSES
each position j. The coefficients are At k(j), Bf.k(j), and D/ k(j), as shown in Eq. (E-l). and are
independent of the C values for a set of linear equations.
Written in block-tridiagonal form, Eq. (E-l) becomes
(E-2)
'B(l) D(l) X
A(2) B(2) D(2)
'C(l)
C(2)
A(./) B(y)
D(J)
CO")
Y
A0m,») B(jm«).
cu-J.
G(2)
where the elements A. B. and D of the main matrix are themselves n x n matrices of
coefficients, i.e..
B..2
B2.2
B..
(E-3)
all evaluated at position ;'. The row subscripts refer to the equation number and the column
subscripts to the unknown number.
X and Y are n x n matrices to be used in cases of certain boundary conditions (see
below). The C(/) and G(y) elements in Eq. (E-2)are 1 x uandn x 1 matrices, respectively: i.e..
CJ
and
G,
(E-4)
(E-3)
again all evaluated at position /'.
The symbols used here are a little different from those used in Chap. 10 for the Thomas
method for n = 1 [Eq. (10-22)]: that is, D instead of C, C instead of /, G instead of D. This is
done to be consistent with the notation used by Newman (1967, 1968, 1973).
Block-tridiagonal sets of difference equations arise whenever a staged process has flow
linkages only between adjacent stages and when there is more than one unknown (mole
fractions, total flows, temperature, etc.) at each position in independent sets of equations. They
also arise for numerical solution of any coupled set of ordinary first- or second-order
boundary-value differential equations, where numerical approximations of derivatives are
made in the standard manner. For certain types of boundary conditions involving first deriva-
tives Newman (1967, 1968. 1973) has shown that it is convenient to use the concept of an image
point. This leads to additional terms in Eqs. (E-2), denoted by the X and Y entries. X is an
n x n matrix of terms from the boundary conditions at one end, and Y is a similar matrix of
terms from the boundary conditions at the other end.
The BAND method (below) solves Eqs. (E-2) under the presumption that the equations
are linear, i.e., that the terms in the A, B. and D matrices are not themselves functions of C,.
C2 Cn. If the equations are. in fact, nonlinear, the BANDsolution couples well with the
full Newton multivariate (SC) convergence method, which involves successive linearization
and solution of the linearized equations (Chap. 10 and Appendix A).
Within the field of countercurrent separation processes, the following classes of problems
lead to block-tridiagonal matrices, solvable by the BAND method, coupled with Newton SC
convergence.
SOLVING BLOCK-TRIDIAGONAL SETS OF LINEAR EQUATIONS 813
1. Staged processes involving complex equilibria, that is, Kj = ./ (all .\j and/or Vj, as well as T
and P), and/or Murphree efficiencies not equal to unity (Chap. 10)
2. Continuous contactors, where complex equilibria and/or variable mass-transfer coefficients
occur (Chap. 11)
3. Complex staged or continuous-contactor processes involving axial dispersion, described by
either the diffusion model or the stage or cell models of backmixing (Chap. 11)
Table E-l lists the BAND program for solving block-tridiagonal sets of linear equations.
Also included is an improved matrix-inversion routine (MATINV), itself a subroutine of
BAND.
In BAND, ,4, B, C, D, G. X, and Y are taken directly from Eqs. (E-l) to (E-5). For A, B. D,
X, and V the first matrix index is the equation number i, and the second index is the unknown
number k. For C the indices are k and j (position), and for G the index is i. The program is
dimensioned for six unknowns (and therefore six simultaneous equations) at each position and
103 positions. These dimensions can readily be changed if desired. The £ matrix E(n, n + 1,
./max) is used during the solution but is not input. The D matrix is made larger [n x (2n + 1)]
than the D input (n x n) in order to provide working room during the solution. BAND is
written to receive as input values of the A, B, D, and G matrices at each value of j, successively.
The program transforms these values for storage, zeros the input matrices, and then receives
values of the A, B, D, and G matrices for the next higher value of;'. Upon reaching the
specified jma, (denoted NJ), BAND then solves for all Ct at all /' and returns these values in the
C array. In order to use BAND, it is necessary to use or write a main program, which calls
BAND at each j to supply values of A, B, D and G and which then receives the computed
values of Ct.} back after j reaches NJ.
BASIC DISTILLATION PROGRAM
Table E-2 gives a basic distillation program DIST, which uses BAND and MATINV as
additional subroutines. The program calculates multicomponent distillation with varying
molar overflow, using the Newton multivariate (SC) convergence scheme, BAND being used
to solve linearized block-tridiagonal matrices during each iteration. The program is more
pedagogical than broadly utilitarian, since as written it does not include provision for Murph-
ree efficiencies other than unity and does not provide for nonideal phase-equilibrium data. The
program is appropriate for student use to gain familiarity with the approach. The program can
also be expanded in a straightforward fashion to incorporate more complex equilibrium data,
since the equilibrium calculation is written as a separate function (EQUIL). This function can
be made more complex in whatever way is desired. However, if the equilibrium relationships
used cause Kt to depend upon other variables besides the component identity / and tempera-
ture T, it will be necessary to make those input variables to the new EQUIL function.
The program can accommodate several different types of problem specification, as noted
below. The number of equilibrium stages must be a specified variable in all cases, as must be
the locations of all feeds and sidestreams.
The following program description is paraphrased from Newman (1967).
The program is written to include as many as 40 stages (including reboiler and condenser)
and as many as 10 components. For problems outside these limits, the dimensions can be
changed appropriately. A total or a partial condenser can be used, and the possibility of a feed,
a side draw of liquid, and a side draw of vapor on each stage has been included. A two-product
condenser can be achieved by a liquid draw from the condenser.
Equilibrium ratios K{ in the form of power series in temperature or exponential functions
can be used. These are put in a subroutine so that they can be changed without much trouble.
Table E-l Subroutines BAND (Newman, 1967) and MATINV (Newman, 1978)t for
solution of block-tridiagonal sets of linear equations
SUBROUTINE BAND!J)
DIMENSION C(6»103)»G(6)>A(6,6)>B(6.6).D(6.13)>E(6.7,10 3),X(6.6).
1Y(6»6)
COMMON A,B>C,D»G»Xrf⦠N»NJ
101 FORMAT (15KOOETERM-6" AT J",14)
IF = G(I)
00 2 L»1,N
LPN» L ⦠N
2 D(I,LPN)» XdtU
CALL MATINV(N,2»N+1.DETERM)
IF (PETERM) 4,3,4
3 PRINT 101, J
4 DO S K»1,N
EUiNP1»1J" DU.2»N*1)
DQ 5 L'ltN
EUiLill' - D(iC,L)
LpN» L + N
5 X(K,L)« - D(K.LPN)
RETURN
6 DO 7 I-l.N
DO 7 <«liN
DO 7 L»1,N
7 0(1,K)« D(I,<) * A(ItL)»X(HKI
8 IF (J-NJ) 11.9,9
9 DO 10 I»1,N
DO 10 L=1,N
G1H- G(I) - Y( I,L)»S(L,NPl,J-2)
DO 10 M=1,N
10 A(I,L1- A(I,L) * YdiM)*E(M,L,J-2)
11 DO 12 I»1»N
r>(i,NPi). - am
DO 12 L»1,N
DUtNPD- J1I.NP1) ⦠A( I,L)»E(L»NP1»J-1)
DO 12 K"1,N
12 BII.K)' B(I.K) ⦠A(I.L)»E(L.<,J-1)
CALL MATlNVIN.NPliDETERMl
IF (OETERM) 14.13,14
13 PRINT 101, J
DO 15 M=1,NP1_
IS EKiM.JI' - OK.M)
IF (J-NJ) 20,16,16
16 DO 17 K.*i»N
17 CU»J)- EK.NP1.J)
00 18 JJ=2iNJ
M» NJ - JJ +
DO 1 Q <* 1. M
C(K.M)» EK»N°1»M)
DO 18 L = 1»N
18 CK»M) - C(K.M) ⦠E(<»L,M|»C(L,M*1)
00 19 L = 1,N
DO 19 K = ltN
19 CIKtll- CK,1) ⦠X,s,L)«C(L,3)
20 RETURN
END
+ Courtesy of Professor Newman.
814
SUBROUTINE >ATIN"V(N,M,DETERM)
DIMENSION A{6,6),3(6,6),C(6,401),D(6,13),ID(6)
COMMON A,B,C,D
DETERM=1.0
DO 1 1=1,N
1 ID(I)=0
DO 18 NN=1,N
BMAX=1.0
DO 6 1=1, N
IF(ID(I).NE.O) GOTO 6
BNEXT=0.0
BTRY=0.0
DO 5 J=1,N
IF(ID(J).NE.O) GOTO 5
IF(ABS(S(I,J)).LE.BNEXT) GOTO 5
BNEXT=ABS(B(I,J))
IF(BNEXT.LE.BTRY) GOTO 5
BNEXT=BTRY
BTRY=ABS(B(I,J))
JC=J
5 CONTINUE
IF(BNEXT.GE.BMAX*BTRY) GOTO 6
BMAX=BNEXT/BTRY
IROW=I
JCOL=JC
6 CONTINUE
IF(ID(JC).EQ.O) GOTO 8
DETERM=0.0
RETURN
8 ID(JC0L)=1
IF(JCOL.EQ.IROW) GOTO 12
DO 10 J=1,N
SAVE=B(IROW,J)
B(IROW,J)=B(JCOL,J)
10 B(JCOL,j)=SAVE
DO 11 K=1,M
SAVE=D(IROW,K)
D(IROW,K)=D(JCOL,K)
11 D(JCOL,K)=SAVE
12 F=1.0/B(JCOL,JCOL)
DO 13 J=1,N
13 B(JC0L,J)=B(JC0L,J)*F
DO 14 K=1,M
14 D(JCOL,K)=D(JCOL,K)*F
DO 18 1=1,N
IF(I.EQ.JCOL) GO TO 18
F=B(I,JCOL)
DO 16 J=1,N
16 B(I,J)=B(I,J)-F*B(JCOL,J)
DO 17 K=1,M
17 D(I,K)=D(I,K)-F*D(JCOL,K)
18 CONTINUE
RETURN
END
Hl<
Table E-2 Program DIST for solution of distillation by successive linearization
(Newman 1967, I978)t
' PROGRAM DISTI INPUT, OUTPUT)
PROGRAM FOR FRACTIONATING COLUMN WITH SIDE-STREAM DRAWS
DIMENSION A( 1 3. 1 31.3 (n.m.Ct 13.401 >P 113. 2 /I. 01 Ijl .XI 13, HI. Yin.
113) .AM m .1KI 10).CSAVE( 10)»T(40) .ALI40) .VI 40)
COMMON A.fl,C.D.G.X,Y.NP3,NS,A<,B<.C<,DK.KTYP»NC7JCOTY7^ITFJUTTflPlt~
1NP2. QC. OR. SL.SV.ERR. T.ALiV.FtHFtFx.lN. SPECS
'
101 FORMAT [TiHlCOMacnENTS STAGE'S ^EE05 COTYP TTYP CTHTT 5
1AWS INSTRUCT I ONS ⢠26X . 7HP303LEM/ ( 1 318)1
102 FORMAT (UflMO I AK(n ' "BUTl" CTTIJ" ..... ~DTTT1
lAML(I) SHU!) CHLUI AHV(I) 6HVII) CHV ( I I /
~~5fTr.7F.lZ74T3Ell7Z.ir"
103 FORMAT (60HO STAGE FEED rNTHALPY COMPQ
10* FORMAT (OHO STAGE LlOUID DRAW VAPOR DRAW/ ( 1 8 . 2E17.6 1 )
105 FORMAT (%9HO SUMERR HE TERR" " " SUBCOL â DTLIH
1 SPECS/(8E15.7|)
1 FORMAT (9F8.4)
_2FORMAT (1314)
3 READ 2~» ?lC«N5~iNh »JCrrYW»HIYf«LlM«NOK«W»( llM( I I « 1= I ⢠3 ] »'-AHV( 1) ,
l^HVr ( I â¢"CHVCI 1 iI'l.NC)
NP1' NC â¢Â» 1 ___
NP2= NC » 2 ~ " "
NP3» NC » 3 _
"~REAO~T7 "7AL(JliJ«lt-lCfNS.NFiJCOTyo,1JTVP.LT'T-«NlJRTfnT1|irrTTr»rtTriWWOBâ
PRINT I02t I 1 »A<( I I »q<( I HCHH 1 tOKI 1 1 »AHL( I ) t^MLI ! 1 tCHLI I I tAHV( I I ,
DO 4 J«liNS
5UTJT' 070'
SV(j)» 1.3
HF(J)» 0.0
00 4 I»1.NC
4 FX(I,J)> 0.0
~f)fl 6 JF»1,NF
R~EAD~1 7" H"FTjl
DO 5 I»1,NC
5 F[J)« FIJI * FXITTJ1
6_ f_R_iNJ 1 'J 3 . J . FIJ I ,HF ( JJ ,_I^X ( I (JJ ) I 1-l.NC)
!F (NOR AW I 9i9i7
7 00 8 J= 1 tND9_AW_
READ 2". JO
READ 1« SL(JO).SV» AL(?) - Aid) - Sid) - SV(l) + F(l)
v?ji= Aifj+ii + v(j-i) - ALiji - SLU! - svrj) + rrj)
V(NS)« V(L) - AL(NS) ~_Sl-INS)^_- ?1V ( NS )__*^ F ( NS I
00 IT I«1TNC
E7« E.OUILI I.T( 1J[)
F.9Rd)«" 1.0/( ALI 1)+! Ul'Tl *" I V"( l") +SVI 1) T*EQ)
Cd.D" FX( I.1!«ERR< 1)
r>0 16 J»2»NS
_.. E09= E<3
E0» EOUILII.TtJ))
IF CJ-NSI _15.13.13
lY IF (JCOTYPI "15.1?.14"
1'ft FQ. l.Q
15 ERR(J)«1.0/(AL(J)+SL(J)+(V(J)+SV(J))â¢S'J-ERK[J-1T^V(J-l)»EQH»AUIJI1
16C(I.J)« (FXII.J) * VIJ-l)*i:Qq»C( I .J-ll )»ERRI Jl
00 17 JO»l.L
J» NS - J0_
ITCII.Jf' Cn.J)" + ERSl JI*Cl 1 ."J+l I»AH J+IP" ' "
00 19 J»1.NS
NPl>' B(NP1>NP1)
>J1*EQPT( ; *Tt JI+SUBCOU
Ir (J-1J 37»37»36
_TB»_T(.HI >
£08- cQUlU'ttTBf
A(
- EOB«V(J-1)
-~~EaoT7T
)3 - EQB»C(
37 ail,!]. AL{J) + SLIJJ + E!Ok(V(J)»SV(JJ J
_38
39
BTI.NP3I- EQ*C(fTJ)
G(I>» FX(I.J)
TTTlT g-RTF 1NTJTT ~:
NP3» NP3 - 2
CALL RANDIJ)
NP3» NP3 -f 2
IF
408(NP3.NP2)« 1.0
G(NP3)- F(J) - SL(J) - SV(J) - AL(J> - V(J1
tN^Z) * â¢â¢ 1 ⢠0
A(NP3,NP31- - 1.0
41
R(NP2tN°2)a ^^0 _
G(NP'3)« GINP3I * AL(J*1)
C&LL SANOt Jl
~50
IF (J-NS I
S0t?2.52
TU« TU+T)
GINP3) »__G|NP3J
00 SI "I«1,NC"
EO- EOUILII.T(J)t
AL(J>1I * V(J-l)
tauiL(11181
HVIB" AHV(I) + BHV(I)»T8 * CHV(I)»T9»»2
HLtU- AHLII) * BHL(I)»TU + CHL(I)»TU»«2
"HCT5~^H1. IIJ ~* BHtTTT»rr^I"i
B(NP2«NP2)» <5(NP2»NP2I * HLl»C(IlJ)
9 I Nl it l"Jf J )
0(NP2iNP2)« 0(NP2iNf2) - HL IU*C { I » J+ 1 )
~ArUP7fNP3J = ArNP7iNF3J--"HVrB»E03»Ct 1 1 J-t
SOLVING BLOCK-TRIDIAGONAL SETS OF LINEAR EQUATIONS 819
A(NP2«I)« - HVIS'EQ^'VI J-l I
B(NP2»1I» HLI*I Alt JI+SLt J) I + HVl«(V( J )*SV ( J) )«EO _
0T8 ) *EQ3» ( BHVI 1
1)*2.0*CHV( f I»T9)1
B(NP2«NP1)» 9(NP2tNPl >*C( I »J)«< I AL(J)+SL(J» )»(BHU( I I*2.0«CHL( 1 )»T(
""
_
pi )
41 OINP2.NP1)» D(NP2tNFl) - ALlJ+l ) »C ( 1 t J* 1 ' ⢠I BHL i II t2 iQ'CHLI I I *TU I
GINP2 ) * HF( Jl " ' '~
_ CAUL BANO_U)_ __
"G&" TO" 30
82 B(N°2»NP2I- _1 ⢠0
G(NP3)> GINP3) + VtJ-1)
CAUL SANOIJJ
RAT=0.0
DO 63 J=1,NS
RATJ=ABS(C(NP2,J)/AL(J) )
RATVJ=ABS(C(NP3,J)A(J) )
IF(RATVJ.GT.RAT) RAT=RATVJ
I F ( RAT J . GT . RAT ) RAT=RAT J
63 CONTINUE
FAC=1.0
IF (RAT. GT. 0.40) FAC=0.4/RAT
DO 64 J=1,NS
64 AL(J)=AL(J)+FAC*C(NP2,J)
"65 DO 6? J-lTtfS "~
IF ( A8SF(C(NPlt J) I-OTLIM) 67i67i66
67 TIJ1- T(J) + CIMP1»JI
GO TO 12
END
820 SI-PM3.NS,AK.8K.,CKfDK»ltTYP»NC»JCOTYP,lTERAT(NPll
110 FORMAT (iMltlttllH ITSRATJONSI
111 F
112 FORMAT (118HO J T(J) U!J> V(J1
\*( 1.11 XI?.Jl XliiJJ X(*tJl XHtJl I
113 FORMAT (119HO J XI6.J) X(7|J) X(8»J)
1X19.J) xjHOjJJ JU1XUJ Xil2j.il x(13iJI I
114 FORMAT (10SHO J XI14.J) X(lSiJ) X(16|J)
1XM7.JI XflS.Jl XI 19t Jl X(2QtJ) I
115 FORMAT (17HOCONDENSER LOAD >iEl«i6 ⢠19H, 3EBOIUER LOAD «»E1*.6)
11A FORMAT (IfcHJTQP PRQCUCT AMOUNTS BY COMPQNENTS/E53t6lEl5iS»3£l»i6/
HE?.8.5.'.El5i6i3El4.6) I
H7 FORMAT IHHOflQTTOM ?aODUCT/E&li 6igl5 i 6 I 3El»t 6/ ( £18 « 6 !<>E1?«6» 3El»i6
1))
11« FORMAT l?QHOVAPQa DRAW Q!S STAGE114/E63.6.E15.6.3E1».6/IEie.6t»E
lliti. 1-.1H.6) I
1)9 FORMAT (?1HCLIQU1D DRAW QN STAGE11»/Eft3.6tEli.6t3E1*«6/(£181 6J *1
11S«6|3E1<>»6) )
PRINT 11Q. 1TFRAT
PRINT 112
If fNT-51 1?0.1?0.1??
120 DO 121 JrltNS
PR-lfJT 11 li J»riJl.ALlJliV(Jli(CIIiJ)iI«l»NC)
GO TO 127
1?7 PRINT 111. lJ.TIJl.AUJ).V(JI»(CtItJ)»I-l»31»J«l.NSl
PRINT 113
IF (NC-131 123il23«125
123 00 12^ J«ltNS
1?4 PRINT 111. J.iCI I.J1 .1-iS.NCI
00 TO 127
123 PRINT 111.IJ.ICI 1.Jl iI-6.13)iJ'l.NSl
PRINT 11*
no 1 >* i«i »n<
126 PRINT 111. J.ICtI.J).I»14,NC)
128 SUMXtl »⢠C( I.ll'ALdl
PRINT 117. ISUMXIll.l*ltNCl
DO 130 I-l.NC
EQ- F.O-JlL(ItT(KS)l
IF IJCOTYP) 130.130»129
FQ- l.Q _ .
130 SUHXUI- C( I»NS)»EO»V(NS)
' PRINT 116. (SUMX(lliI» lj N.C L
00 137 J-l.NS
IF ISLtJll 133il33»131
131 00 132 I-l.NC
132 SUHX11 I- ClItJ1»SL(Jl
PRINT 119. J..8113*13)»C(13»40J»0l13*271»0t13)lX»13»13)«Y(13â¢
IQ).DK(IO)
COMMON A.B.C.D.G.X.Y.NPS.NSiAIC.BKtCKiDKiKTYP
IF KTYP-ll Ii-li2
1 EOUIL- EXPFf AKt I >/(T+DK( I) I * BICI I ) +CK I I) * ( T+OK ( I 1 ) 1
RETURN ,
2 EOUIU" AK(I) + 8K(1)»T + Cli(t)»T»*2 + OK(I)*T«»3
atiuaa
END
FUNCTION EOOTtI.T)
DIMENSION' Al 13.131,3(13.13) tC( 13^0).0(13.271.3(13) tX(13>13ltY(n»
113)lAM10) .B<(10 I.C<(10 I.OKI 10)
rQMMQN A.9.C.O.G. X IY «NP3 .NS t AIC . BK tCX f O^l K.TYP
IF «TY°-1) 1.1.2
1 FQDT-_EAPFXA!tlIl/t T»DK( I 1 H-BKI t I f CK( 11 ⢠( T + DK ( I 1 ) ) ⢠( CK 1 I 1 -Alt (I 1 / (
1T+DKII))»»2)
RETURN
2 EODT» 8MH + 2.C»CK(II*T + 3.0»OK ( I ) »T»»2
RgTURN
END
822 SEPARATION PROCESSES
The number of unknowns n on each stage is taken to be n = NC + 3, where NC is the number
of components. The three additional unknowns are proposed changes in the temperature,
liquid flow rate, and vapor flow rate.
The flow rate of the bottom product is controlled, i.e.. left unchanged, by statement 41,
and that of the reflux by statement 52. These represent the two remaining degrees of freedom
after the number of stages, nature of feed, feed and side-draw locations, pressure, etc., have
been specified. At the top or bottom of the column one might wish to control any of the
following:
1. Bottom-product amount or top-product amount
2. Reflux or vapor flow from the reboiler
3. The mole fraction of a component in the top or bottom product
4. The flow rate of a component in the top or bottom product
5. The reboiler or condenser temperature
6. The heat load for the condenser or the reboiler
In Table E-3 Fortran statements are given for implementing the first five of these possibilities
at both the top and the bottom of the column. Statement 41 and the following statement
should be replaced by statements 41 to 43, and, for the top, statement 52 and that following
should be replaced by statements 52 to 62. These added statements use IN(1) to IN(4) and
SPECS(l) and SPECS(2) to decide which specification to use, which component to control,
and what value to achieve.
These additional, more flexible specifications must be used with caution. First, they can
contradict each other. One cannot specify both the top and bottom products independently.
for example. Second, one must stay within the range of possible operating conditions of the
column. For example, the reboiler temperature can be no higher than the boiling point of the
heaviest component.
The input data are outlined below:
NC = number of components
NS = number of stages, including reboiler and condenser
NF = number of feeds
JCOTYP = '° f°r partial condenser
|2 for total condenser
_ 1° f°r exponential equilibrium ratios
|2 for power-series equilibrium ratios
LIM = limit on total number of iterations
NDRAW = number of stages on which side draws occur
IN(1) to IN(4). Used for alternate problem specifications; see above.
IN(5). Controls the number of times that temperature corrections are made without changes in
the liquid and vapor flow rates (see the statement just before statement 39). A low value
for IN(5) would typically be used. This serves to hold the total-flow-rate portions of the
matrix of partial derivatives inactive for IN(5) iterations.
NPROB. Problem number for identification of output.
AK, BK, CK, DK. Parameters in the expressions for the equilibrium ratios, as follows:
Power-series expression:
Kt = AK, + (BK,)T + (CK,)T2 + (DKJT* (E-6)
Table E-3 Alternate statements for DIST to allow changes in problem specification
(Newman, 1967)
41
4?
IF UNU)) 47.47.42
Km TNM)
GO TO (43.44.45.46)»K
c
FIXED 80TT0M PRODUCT COMPOSITION! SPECSU)" XU>
43
!â INI3)
BINP2.D" 1.0
G(NP2)« SPECSU)
GO TO 48
C.
FI)
44
(ED BOTTOM PRODUCT COMPONENT AMOUNT. SPECSU)" X(I)»AL(J)
I" INI 3)
B(NP2.I)« ALU)
B(NP2.NP2I« C(I .1)
G(NP2)» SPECSU)
GO TO 48
C
45
FIXED RESoIlER TEmPERATU^Ei 5PEC5U)- TIJ)
B(NP2.NP1)» 1.0
GINP2J" SPECSU) - Til)
GO TO 48
c
46
FIXED VAPOR FLOW FROM REbOILER, SPECS! 1 J- VUJ
BINP2.NP3)" 1.0
G(NP2)» SPECS!1) - V(1)
GO TO 48
C
47
FIXED BOTTOM PRODUCT AMOUNT
B(NP?iNP2)« 1.0
48
G(NP3)» GINP3) ⦠ALU*1)
52
IF (INI2)) 61.61.53
<â INI 2)
5?
GO TO (54.56.59.60) .<
C
FIXED TOP PRODUCT COMPOSITION. SPECSI2)" Y(I)
54
I* IN(4|
B(N"2»I )= EOUILII.TINS))
B(NP2iNPl)= CI!.NS)»cQDT(IiT(NS)I
G«NP2)« SPECSI2)
55
IF (JCOTYP) 62.62.55
B(NP?.I)» 1.0
B(NP2»NP1)« 0.0
GO TO 62
C
56
FIXED TOP PRODUCT COMPONENT AMOUNT, SPECSI2)- YUl'ViJJ
!â INI4)
EO« EOUILII.TINS))
B(NP2.NP1)= CI I.NSl'VINSJ'EQOTII.TINS))
IF (JCOTYP) 58.58.57
37
E0- 1.0
58
B(N?2»NP1)» 0.0
8(N°2iND3)=» CI I »NS)»EO
824 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Exponential expression:
T.L.
J ~r
AK
' + BK< + CK'(T
AHL, BHL, CHL. Parameters in a power-series expression for the enthalpy of a liquid stream.
Per mole of mixture,
h = £ XJiAHLt + (BHLt)T + (CHLJT2] (E-8)
i
AHV, BHV, CHV. Parameters in a power-series expression for the enthalpy of a vapor stream.
Per mole of mixture
H = X y{AHVi + (BHVt)T + (Ctf K)T2]
i
AL. Initial estimates of the flow rates of the liquid streams leaving each stage (the last one
being the reflux).
T. Estimated temperatures for each stage.
J. Feed stage.
HF. Total enthalpy of the feed.
FX. Feed rate for each component (J, HF, and FX are repeated for each feed stage).
JD. Number of stage with a side draw.
SL and SV. Molal flow rates for liquid and vapor sidestreams (JD, SL, and SV are repeated for
each sidestream).
SUMERR. Used to check convergence. The mole fraction of each component in the reboiler
must change by less than SUMERR between one iteration and the next in order to satisfy
the convergence criterion.
SUBCOL. Subcooling of reflux for total condenser (degrees below bubble point).
DTLIM. Upper limit on the temperature correction, degrees.
SPECS(l) and SPECS(2). Used with alternate problem specifications (see above).
CHECK. 011111 + 1 in columns 65 to 72. This is used to make sure that the correct number of
cards has been read.
Any number of problems can be run consecutively. In the output, J is the stage number, T
is the temperature, AL is the liquid flow (or reflux for a total condenser). SUMX is the sum of
the mole fractions, and X are component mole fractions. The component flow rates are then
listed for the bottom product, the top product, and any sidestreams.
Fredenslund et al. ( 1977) give complete listings of distillation programs using the UNIFAC
method to generate vapor-liquid equilibrium data and using the Newton multivariate SC
method for convergence. Two programs are given, one allowing for variable molar overflow
and the other postulating constant molal overflow.
REFERENCES
Fredenslund, A., J. Gmehling, and P. Rasmussen (1977): "Vapor-Liquid Equilibria Using UNIFAC."
Elsevier. Amsterdam.
Newman. J. S. (1967): Lawrence Berkeley Lab. Rep. UCRL-17739, Berkeley, Calif.
- (1968): Iiid. Eng. Chem. Fundam., 7:514.
- (1973): "Electrochemical Systems," Prentice-Hall. Englewood Cliffs. N.J.
- - â (1978): University of California, Berkeley, personal communication.
APPENDIX
SUMMARY OF PHASE-EQUILIBRIUM
AND ENTHALPY DATA
Type
Components
Location
Phase equilibrium
General references
Pp. 42-43
Gas-liquid
H2S. C02.C2H4. 02, CO, N2 in water
Fig. 6-7
C02-potassium carbonate solution
Fig. 6-32
CO2 water: NH3-water
Fig. 7-39
H2S C02-monoethanolamine solution
Figs. 10-2 to 10-5
CH4-220-MW paraffinic oil
Fig. 13-6
Vapor-liquid
n-Butane. n-pentane. n-hexane
Fig. 2-2
Ethanol-water
Fig. 2-21
Hydrogen-methane
Fig. 2-23
Acetone-acetic acid
Example 2-7
Methanol-water
Prob. 5-B
Ethylene-ethane
Prob. 5-M
Acetone-water
Table 6-2
Water vapor NaOH solution
Prob. 6-E
Ethanol-water-benzene
Fig. 7-29
Methylcyclohexane-toluene-phenol
Fig. 7-31
n-Heptane-toluene-methyl ethyl ketone
Fig. 7-33
Alcohol mixtures
Probs. 2-R, 8-D
Propylene-propane
Prob. 8-J
Propyne-propylene-propane
Prob. 8-L
Methanol-water-formaldehyde
Fig. 10-13
825
826 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Liquid-liquid Vinyl acetate acetic acid water Fig. 1-21
Zr(NO3)4 NaNOj HNOj H2O tributyl phosphate Example 6-1
Water acetone methyl isobutyl ketone Example 6-6
Methylcyclohexane-n-heptane-aniline Prob. 6-F
Water-phenol-isoamyl acetate Prob. 6-K
Gas-solid Water vapor-activated alumina Fig. 3-17
Water vapor-molecular sieve Fig. 3-19
Liquid-solid m-Cresol p-cresol Fig. 1-25
Gold-platinum Fig. 1-27
p-Xylene-m-xylene Fig. 14-4
p-Xylene-m-xylene-o-xylene Fig. 14-5
Enthalpy
H-Butane, n-pentane, n-hexane
Ethanol-water
Ethanol-isopropanol-n-propanol
Acetone-water
Hydrogen (Mollier diagram)
Methane (Mollier diagram)
Fig. 2-10
Figs. 2-20, 2-21
Prob. 2-P
Table 6-2
Fig. 13-4
Fig. 13-5
Other
Properties of xylene isomers
Solubility parameters of various compounds
Table 14-2
Table 14-6
APPENDIX
NOMENCLATURE
Symbol
Definition
Dimcnsionst
h
h-
B
B
Bi
c
C
C(5, p)
c,
"l.
DO
Interfacial area per unit tower volume L !
Constants in Martin equations, defined in Eqs. (8-64)
and (8-6S)
Heat-transfer area of coils in effect i (Appendix B) L2
Surface area of dry packing per unit packed volume
(Chap. 12) IT'
Tower cross-sectional area; cross-sectional area of liquid in
direction of flow (Chap. 12): area per membrane (dialysis) /?
Absorbent flow rate; airflow rate mol/r
Constant defined by Eq. (8-71)
Membrane area in stage p 1}
Coefficients defined by Eq. (10-15)
Bottoms flow rate in distillation column mol/r
Intercept of straight line
Bottoms product in batch distillation mol
Constant defined by Eq. (8-72)
Available energy, H - T0S (Chap. 13) Q/mo\
Coefficients defined by Eqs. (10-16) to (10-18)
Biot number
Molar density; concentration mol/Z?
Number of components, in phase rule: constant defined
by Eq. (8-73)
Binomial coefficient: number of combinations which can be
made from 5 objects taken p at a time
Concentration of component i mol/L3
Concentration of component i in streamy, Eq. (1-22) mol! I?
Component mass-balance function, Eq. (10-12)
Heat capacity Q/MT
Coefficients defined by Eq. (10-1)
Differential operator
Distillate flow rate (liquid) mol/t
Diameter L
Drop diameter L
Distillate flow rate (vapor) mol/r
Diffusivity for A in B L2/t
Effective diflusivily for mixing in direction of flow (Chap. 12) L'/t
Molecular diffusivity in gas phase Z?/r
D,
D.
Molecular diffusivity in liquid phase L2/(
Coefficients defined by Eq. (10-20)
t L = length
M = mass
mol = moles
P = pressure
Q = heat or energy
T = temperature
r = time
827
828 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Symbol
Definition
Dimcnsionst
(DR),
E
E
E
E,.E,
壉
(AE,.),
erf(x)
/<*)
/,
',
F
f
F
r
FI
Fo
9(*}
"r
G
a
Gf
Distribution ratio for component i, defined by Eq. (9-26)
Base of natural logarithms
Moles of entrainmcnt per unit time (Chap. 12)
Extract flow rate
Axial dispersion coefficient
Eq. (10-1) (type of equation)
Constants defined by Eq. (8-74)
Murphree vapor efficiency: apparent value in the presence
of entrainment
Hauscn stage efficiency. Eq. (12-38)
Holland vaporization efficiency for component i on stage p,
Eq. (12-36)
Murphree stage efficiency for component i based on stream V
Overall stage efficiency
Point efficiency (Chap. 12)
Energy dissipation rate
Latent energy of vaporization of component i
Error function of .x. defined by Eq. (8-51)
Fraction of gas flowing to the left of location considered
(Chaps. 3 and 12): fraction back mixing (Chap. 11);
Fanning friction factor (Chap. 11)
Function of x
Flow of component i in feed
Fraction of water in feed which remains in solution leaving
effect i (Appendix B); probability of component i going 10
next stage in any one transfer (countercurrent distribution)
Flow of component; in feeds (less products) to stage p
(Chap. 10)
Feed flow rate
Degrees of freedom, in phase rule
"GVW (Chap. 12)
Charge to a batch separation process
Moles of component i in feed pulse (chromatography)
Fourier number
Function of ,v
Coefficients in Thomas method, Eqs. (10-27) and (10-28)
Gas flow rate
Gibbs free energy
mol/r
mol/i
L'/t
Q/L't
G/mol
mol/i
NOMENCLATURE 829
Symbol
Definition
Dimensionst
*«.
h.
k,
H
H
H
H
H
Jf
H*
II,,
Hr
AH,
HETP
(HTUU
(HTU)C
i
if
in
J
k
k
Clear liquid crest over weir (Chap. 12) L
Tray-to-tray pressure drop, expressed as liquid head
(Chap. 12) L
Specific enthalpy of vapor phase C/mol
Weir height (Chap. 12) L
Specific enthalpy of a vapor g/mol
Henry's law constant PL3/mol
Total enthalpy of a stream Q
Height of liquid in downcomer (Chap. 12) L
Eqs. (10-3) (type of equation)
Flow rate of high-pressure product from gaseous diffusion
stage mol/i
Specific enthalpy of feed at temperature corresponding to
tower pressure dew point of feed mixture (Chap. 5) Q/mol
Feed flow rate to gaseous diffusion stage mol/t
Heat of absorption Q/mol
Molal enthalpy of the vapor which would be in equilibrium
with the feed if the feed were a liquid at its column
pressure bubble point (Chap. 5) Q/mol
Enthalpy of a liquid product Q
Enthalpy function for stage p. Eqs. (10-3)
Length equivalent to an equilibrium stage (chromatography) L
Enthalpy of a vapor product Q
Latent heat of vaporization Q/mol
Height equivalent to a theoretical plate L
Height of an overall transfer unit, based on stream 0 L
Height of an individual phase transfer unit, based on
stream G L
Square root of - 1
Mass transfer j factor, Eq. (11-44)
Heat transfer) factor. Eq. (11-45)
Molar flux mol/L2(
Boltzmann's constant Q/moleculc-T
Thermal conductivity Q/LtT
Mass-transfer coefficient, based upon concentration
driving force L/l
Individual gas phase mass-transfer coefficient, based
upon partial-pressure driving force mol/tP/.2
Individual liquid phase mass-transfer coefficient, based
upon concentration driving force Lit
Rate proportionality constant for salt transport across a
membrane, defined by Eq. (1-23) L/t
Rate proportionality constant for water transport across
a membrane, defined by Eq. (1-22) mol/(PL2
830 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Symbol
Definition
Dimensions*
K.
/,
lj r
In
log
1.
L
L
L
£
L,
L"
M
M
M(
M,
Ma
M,
n
N
HI
s â
Ns
(NTU)6
p(£)
p,
p
p
AP
P,, Pa
P,. P,
Factor in Eq. (12-1)
Flow rate of component i in liquid
Flow rate of component : in liquid leaving stage p
Natural logarithm
Base 10 logarithm
Total liquid flow rate: liquid flow rate in rectifying section
Liquid flow rate across a plate (Chap. 12)
Characteristic length (Chap. 1 1 )
Liquid flow rate in stripping section: flow rate of inert
components in liquid
Amount of liquid in the still pot in a Raylcigh distillation
Initial liquid charge to a Rayleigh distillation
Liquid flow rale in intermediate section of a multistage
separation process
Flow rate of liquid in feed
Change in / at feed stage. L - L
Liquid flow rate per unit cross-sectional area of tower
Slope of the equilibrium curve, - J\ ,i number of stages
below feed
Liquid holdup on a stage
Eqs. (10-2) (type of equation)
Moles of gas per unit column volume (chromatography)
Molecular weight of component i
Amount or concentration of component i in feed (counter-
current distribution)
Amount or concentration of component i in stage p after
transfer step 5
Moles of liquid per unit column volume (chromatography)
Molecular weight of vapor
Number of stages above feed
Number of stages
Flux of component i across interface or barrier
Number of stages in rectifying section
Number of stages in stripping section
Number of overall transfer units, based upon stream G
NOMENCLATURE 831
Symbol
Definition
Dimensionst
r
r
R
R
R
RA
R.
Re
s
s
S
S
S
S
S1
S0
Sr ,
Sc
Sh
(
r,
Tf
u
U
U
< i \ R, E)
0(N)
VL
V,
PJ f
V
Radius
Reflux flow rate
Moles Ml A iiiul or inlet gas (Example 10-2)
Gas constant
Raffinale flow rate
Number of components
High-flux parameter (Eq. 11-57)
Ratio of effective velocity of component i along the column
to the gas velocity (chromatography)
Reynolds number
Surface renewal rate
Number of transfers (countercurrent distribution)
Solids flow rate
Solvent flow rate
Entropy
Eqs. (10-4) and (10-5) (type of equation)
Tray spacing (Chap. 12)
Steam-condensation rate in coils of first effect (Appendix B)
Solvent selectivity for i over j. Eq. (14-1)
Liquid sidestream flow rate (Chap. 10)
Number of different column sequences possible for
separating R products
Vapor sidestream flow rate (Chap. 10)
Summation of mole fraction function, Eqs. (10-4) and (10-5)
Schmidt number, nlpD
Sherwood number
Time
Time elapsed between feed sample injection and emergence
of peak for component i (chromatography)
Residence time of liquid on a plate in a distillation column
(Chap. 12)
Residence time within separation device
Temperature
Ambient temperature (Chap. 13)
Saturation temperature of vapor generated in effect /
832 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Symbol
Definition
Dimensions*
r
y.
y,
(An,
K.
H-;
It
w
w
x
x
x'
X.X,
y
y
Velocity t/l
Cumulative volume of carrier gas passed through column
since feed sample injection (chromatography); volume
of a phase L3
Partial molal volume L3/mol
Vapor flow rate in stripping section mol/r
Vapor flow rate in intermediate section of a multistage
separation process mol/r
Initial vapor charge to a batch separation process mol
Flow rate of vapor in feed mol/r
Change in vapor flow rate at feed stage. = V â V mol/r
Volume of gas within each vessel in stage chromatography
model I?
Molal volume of component i L3/mol
Volume of liquid within each vessel in stage chromatog-
raphy model L1
Vapor flow leaving stage p (Chap. 10) mol/r
Permeate volumetric flow from stage p l?/t
Weight of water in product concentrate (Example 3-1) M
Weight fraction of component i
Weight fraction of component i on a solvent-free basis
Time lapse corresponding to peak width for component i
(chromatography) (
Weight of ice crystals (Example 3-1) M
Coefficients in Thomas method: Eqs. (10-23) and (10-25)
Weight M
Water flow rate mol/r
Weir height (Chap. 12) Inches
Work (Chap. 13) C/mol
Amount of water in feed salt solution (Appendix B) M/I
Net work consumption of process Q/mol
Net work consumption of process Q/t
Solute mole fraction (usually liquid)
Distance from leading edge (Chap. 11) L
Mole fraction on the basis of the keys alone (liquid) (Chap. 7)
Mole fraction of component i (usually liquid)
Liquid-phase mole fraction of component i in stream <
Solute mole fraction in the liquid phase
Solute mole fraction in the solid phase
Mole ratio of component i in liquid phase (moles //moles inert)
Solute mole fraction in vapor or gas phase
Mole fraction on the basis of the keys alone, vapor phase
Y.Y,
Symbolk
m,
(Chap. 7): vapor-phase mole fraction, including
entrained liquid (Chap. 3)
Mole fraction of component i. vapor phase
Mole fraction of component i in stream j (vapor)
Mole ratio of component i in vapor phase (mol i/mol inert)
Distance in the direction of liquid flow across a distillation
NOMENCLATURE 833
Symbol
Definition
Dimensions*
â¢5
*,
A
A
A,,
(
i
n
Ait
PG
P,
f>H
P,
n
I
XA
WO
"D
Subscripts
A. B, C. ...
of component i in product j divided by amount of
component i fed
Crack
a, Relative volatility of component i with respect to reference
component
«,j Separation factor; relative volatility of component i with
respect to component ;; KJK/, equilibrium or inherent
separation factor
Actual separation factor between components i and ;.
based upon actual product compositions
Constant defined in Eq. (8-78); constant in Eq. (9-27)
Aeration factor
Surface tension of liquid phase dyn/cm
Activity coefficient of component i
Activity coefficient of component i in phase;
Film thickness L
Solubility parameter of component i, defined by Eq. (14-4) (C/L3)12
Average solubility parameter of liquid mixture, defined by
Eq. (14-3) (C/L3)"
II if j = p
Kronecker delta, 6 = â¢
10 if s * p
Difference in a quantity
Hydraulic gradient of liquid across a plate (Chap. 12) L
Temperature difference between dew point and bubble point T
Void fraction of a bed of solids
Lcnnard-Joncs interaction potential Q/molecule
Fraction of vessel volume occupied by liquid
Thermodynamic efficiency, = Wmill T !Wf
Total exposure time f
Constant in Eq. (9-27); constant defined by Eq. (8-77);
convergence factor, Eq. (10-32)
Constants defined by Eqs. (8-75) and (8-76)
High-flux parameter, defined by Eq. (11-55)
Average latent heat of vaporization of mixture (Chap. 13) g/mol
K, V/L or mG/L: stripping factor; reciprocal absorption factor
Liquid viscosity M/Lt
Separation index
3.14159
Difference in osmotic pressure across membrane, Eq. (1-22) P
Gas-phase density M/L3
Liquid-phase density M/L3
Molar density mol/L3
Molar density of water mol/L3
Collision diameter L
Summation
834 SEPARATION PROCESSES
Symbol Definition Dimensions*
a, A Aqueous phase
â¢v Average
h Bottoms
J Distillate (liquid)
D Distillate (vapor)
diff Difference point
£ Extract
E, eq Equilibrium with other phase
/ Final; film factor. Eqs. (11-65) and (11-66): feed stage
F Feed stream
flood Flooding
G Gas
H High-pressure side (rate-governed separation processes); high
temperature
HK Heavy key
HNK Heavy nonkey
i. j Components
i Inlet; iteration number (Chap. 10)
in Inlet
J Defined by Eqs. (11-53) and (11-54); based upon ratio of J
to driving force
/ Lower phase (countercurrenl distribution); liquid; low
temperature; low-pressure side (rate-governed separation
processes)
lim Limiting value in zone of constant mole fraction
LK Light key
LM Logarithmic mean
LNK Light nonkey
min Minimum
mix Mixing
N Based on ratio of N to driving force
0 Outlet
0. O Organic phase
op Operating
opt Optimum
out Outlet
P Stage p
r Reflux; reference component
R Reboiler: raffinate
S Sidestrcam; steam: solvent; solids
sop Separation
spec Specified
1 Top
7|, With heat sources and sinks at ambient temperature
I' Upper phase (countercurrcnt distribution)
w Water
x \ phase
y y phase
0 Initial value
1. 2 Ends of a column; products
oo Limiting value in zone of constant composition
Superscripts
* Equilibrium with prevailing value in other phase (equilibrium
with exit value of other phase in Murphree efficiencies)
⢠Mole average (Chap. II)
V Volume average (Chap. 11)
INDEX
INDEX
Absorber, reboiled. 163-164
Absorber-stripper, 341, 683
Absorption, 22
with chemical reaction, 268-270,
304-307, 456-466
energy conservation, 720-721
energy consumption, 682-684
examples, 311-313, 321-324, 408-109
fractional, 682-684
multicomponent, calculation of, 498-499
patterns of change: binary, 311-313,
317-318
multicomponent. 321-324
temperature profiles, 311-313, 317-318,
321-324
yx diagram for, 264-270
Absorption factor, 73
optimum value, 367
Acetic acid, extraction from water,
762-763
Activity coefficients, 31
influence on extraction processes,
758-761
Addition of resistances, 538-539, 542-545
Adductive crystallization, 23, 745
Adiabatic flash, 80-89, 93-%
Adiabatic-saturation temperature, 549
Adsorbing-colloid flotation, 27-28
Adsorption. 22
charcoal, 5, 6, 8
chromatography, 179
cycling-zone, 193-195
drying of gases by, 128-130, 136
heatless. 130
for separation of xylenes, 745-746
zeolites, 745-746
Adsorptive bubble separation methods, 27
Agitated column for extraction, 765-770
AIChE method for stage efficiencies in
plate columns, 609-626
summarized, 621-622
Air, separation of, 16, 307-308. 697-698
Alumina, activated, water-sorption
equilibrium. 129
Amines as solvents, 762-763
ASTM distillation. 436
Available energy, 664, 689
Axial dispersion:
analytical solutions, 575-577
defined, 556, 570-571
effect upon operating diagram, 571-572
graphical solution, 576
837
838 INDEX
Axial dispersion:
mechanisms, 570-571
models of, 572-575
numerical solutions, 577-580
Taylor dispersion, 570
Azeotropes, 34-35, 250
Azeotropic distillation, 345-349, 352-354,
455, 745
Baffle-column extractors, 765-770
BAND program for block-tridiagonal
matrices, 811-815
Batch distillation, 115-123, 243-248, 501
Batch processes, 115-130, 243-248
Berl saddles, 153
Binary distillation, 206-250
group methods. 393-406
Binary flash, 72
Binary multistage separations (general),
calculation of, 259-295, 361-398,
556-583
Binary systems, defined, 206-208
Binomial distribution, 378
Biot number, 541
Block-tridiagonal matrix. 480-481,
566-568, 577-579,811-815
Blowing on distillation plates, 601-602
Boiling curves. 436. 438
Bond energies suitable for chemical
complexing, 737
Borax, manufacture of, 54-57
Boric acid, manufacture of, 54, 57
BP arrangement, 483-485
Breakthrough curves, 126-127
(See also Fixed-bed processes)
Brine processing, 54-57
Bubble-cap trays. 147, 149, 150
entrainment with, 597-598, 620-621
flooding in, 594-5%
Bubble caps. 147. 149, 150
Bubble fractionation. 23. 27-28. 164-166
Bubble point. 61-68
acceleration of calculation within
distillation problems, 474
Bubble-point (BP) arrangement for
calculation of multicomponent
distillation. 483-J85
Caffeine removal from coffee, 516-518,
541-542, 775-776
Capacity of separation equipment
(flows), 591-608
contrasted with stage efficiency,
641-642
Cascade trays, 602-604
Cascades:
of distillation columns, 692-695
multiple-section, 371-376
one-dimensional, 140-144, 189-190
two-dimensional, 195-197
Centrifugal extractors, 767-770
Centrifugation, 2, 5, 8
filtration-type, 26
gravity-type, 25
Chemical absorption, 268-270, 304-307,
456-466
Chemical complexing, 27, 735-738, 746.
761-763
Chemical derivitization, 27
Chemical reaction, effect of: on mass-
transfer coefficient, 528
INDEX 839
Chromatography:
polarization, 187-188
scale-up, 191
sieving, 179
temperature programming, 186-187,
384
thin-layer, 185-186
uses, 188-189
Citrus processing:
peel liquor, 690-692
{See also Fruit juices)
Clarification, 2
Clathration, 23, 744, 755
Cocurrent contacting, compared with
countercurrent, 157-160, 642-643
Coffee:
decaffeination of, 516-518, 541-542,
775-776
extraction of, 173-174
instant, manufacture of, 775-776
Colburn equation, 563-564
Complexing, chemical, 27, 735-738,
746, 761-763
Composition profiles:
absorption, 311-313. 321-324
distillation. 313-315. 325-331
extraction, 319-321. 336-343
Computer methods:
multistage processes. 446-503
single-stage processes. 64-90
Computer programs for separation
processes, 503
Concentration polarization, 534-535,
586-589
Condensation, partial, as separation
process, 667-672
Condenser:
optimum temperature difference,
807-308
partial: defined, 145
versus total, specification variables,
795
total, defined, 145
Constant molal overflow, 216-218
Constant-rate period in drying, 552-553
Contacting devices (see specific types;
e.g.. Packed towers, Plate
towers, etc.)
Continuous contactors:
cocurrent, 580-583
Continuous contactors:
countercurrent, 556-580
crosscurrent. 583
Continuous countercurrent
contactors, 556-583
minimum height, 566
sources of data, 583
Control schemes, 770-771
Convection, 508
Convergence methods, 65-68, 404,
777-784
review of, 777-784
Cooling tower, 549
Costs, references, 798
Counter-double-current distribution
(CDCD), 189
Countercurrent contacting, 150-154
contrasted with cocurrent contacting,
157-160. 642-643
840 INDEX
Density gradients, effect upon mass-
transfer rates and stage efficien-
cies, 630-633
Derivitization, 27
Desalination of seawater, 16, 155-157,
171, 199-200, 723-725, 785-790
Description rule, 69-71, 791-797
Design problems, 70, 225-226, 448.
49M96
Design successive approximation
(DSA) method, 491^*94
Desublimation, 21
Deuterium, separation from hydrogen
(see Heavy water, distillation)
Dew point, 61-68
Dialysis. 24, 45, 172, 753
Diameter, optimum, for column, 807
Dielectric constant, relation to
intermolecular forces, 734-736
Difference point, 275-278. 286-291
Differential migration, 179
Differential model of axial dispersion,
572-573
Diffuser for extraction and leaching
of solids, 172
Diffusion:
in cylinder, 516
gaseous, for separation, 23, 43-45,
119-121, 166-168,687
Knudsen, 44. 513
molecular (kinetic theory), 508-514
multicomponent, 511
nozzle, 25
in slab, 516
in solids. 513.514
in sphere, 516, 540-541
sweep, 23
thermal, 24
Diffusion equations, solutions, 515-518
Diffusional separation processes, 18
Ditfusivity:
definition of, 509-510
prediction of: gases, 511-513
liquids, 513-514
Dimensionless groups, 524-525
Biot number, 541
Fourier number, 523, 525
Grashof number, 524
Lewis number, 549
Nusselt number, 524
Dimensionless groups:
Peclet number, 573, 576
Prandtl number, 525
Rayleigh number, 524
Reynolds number, 524
Schmidt number, 524
Sherwood number, 523
Dipole moment, 734, 736, 740-741
Direct substitution (convergence),
78-79, 777-779
Displacement chromatography, 176-177
Distillation, 21
allowable operating conditions,
233-234
ASTM. 436
azeotropic (see Azeotropic distillation)
batch: multistage, 243-248
single-stage, 115-123
binary, 206-250
INDEX 841
Distillation:
Rayleigh, 115-123
reverse, 333-337
reversible, 703-704
sequencing, 710-719
specification, 791-797
stage efficiencies, allowance for,
237-239
steam, 248-250
TBP, 436
temperature profiles, 313-316, 325-337
ternary mixtures, 710-713
thermodynamic efficiency, 681-682
Underwood equations, 393^406
vapor-recompression in, 726-727
varying molar flows, 273-283
Distributing nonkeys (minimum reflux),
334,418-423
Distribution of nonkey components,
433^36
effect of reflux ratio, 434-436
Distribution ratio (DR), defined, 426
Downcomer, 146, 148
liquid back-up in, 595-596
Drying:
of gases: absorption, 298-299
solid desiccants, 128-130. 136
of solids, 9. 21. 550-556
freeze drying, 554
rates, 552-556
Dual-solvent extraction. 163
Dual-temperature exchange processes.
21, 52-53,204, 302-304,410
Dumping in plate columns, 602
Duo-sol process, 163
Dynamic behavior of separation
processes. 501
Efficiency (see specific types; e.g.,
Murphree efficiency, Stage
efficiency, Thermodynamic
efficiency, etc.)
Effusion, gaseous (see Diffusion, gaseous)
EFV (equilibrium flash vaporization)
curve, 436
Electrochromatography, 190-191
Electrodialysis, 24, 168-171, 199-200
Electrolysis, 24
Electrophoresis, 20, 24, 179
Electrostatic precipitation, 26
Elution chromatography, 176-177
Empirical correlations (stages versus
reflux), 428-432
Energy, available, 664, 689
Energy conservation, 687-721
Energy requirements, 660-721
multistage processes, 678-687
reduction of, 687-721
reversible separations, 661-666
Energy separating agent, defined, 18
Enthalpies:
of hydrocarbons, 82
index of data, 826
"virtual," partial molar, 481, 485
Enthalpy-balance restrictions:
in absorption and stripping, 317-318
in distillation, 315-316, 318
Enthalpy-concentration diagram,
93-96, 273-283
Entrainer in azeotropic distillation, 346
842 INDEX
Ethanolamines, absorption of acid
gases by, 456-466
equilibrium data, 457-459
Ethylbenzene, separation from styrene,
643-651
Ethylene manufacture, 699-700, 708-710,
717-719,725-727
Eutectic point, 39-40
Evaporation, 2, 8, 21
flash, 200-201
forward feed versus backward feed,
789-790
of fruit juices, 748-750
multieffect, 155-157, 785-790
preheat, 789-790
simultaneous heat and mass transfer,
546-549
vacuum, 749
Evaporative crystallization, 2-9
Evaporators:
fouling of, 749
multieffect, 155-157
preheat, 789-790
Expression (separation process), 8,
26, 690-691
External resistance, 550-552
Extract reflux, 161-162, 291-292
Extraction, 22
chemical complexing in, 762-763
complex, computation of. 499-501
equilibrium data, 36-37, 42-43.
758-761
equipment for, 13, 162. 765-770
examples, 15, 318-321, 336-343,
762-763
flooding, in packed column, 596
fractional, 163, 333-335
graphical approaches, 96-97, 283-293
multistage, graphical analysis, 283-293
patterns of change: binary, 318-321
multicomponent, 336-343, 499-501
process configuration, 763-765
process selection. 757-770
reflux in, 162-164
single-stage, 96-97
of solids, 172-174
solvent selection, 757-763
staging of, 160-163
unsaturates from saturates, 729-731
yx diagram for. 259-262
Extractive crystallization, 745
Extractive distillation, 20. 23, 344-345,
350-352, 455
saturates/unsaturates, 729-731
solvent selection, 761
Extractors, types of, 765-770
Falling-rate period in drying, 552-554
False position (convergence method),
778-780
Feasibility as selection criterion, 728-731
Feed, thermal condition, allowance for.
in distillation. 221-223
Feed stage in distillation. 228-233
effect of nonkeys, 294
optimum, 230-231, 494-4%
selection. 454, 494-496
Feeds, multiple, in distillation, 223-224,
423^24
Fenske-Underwood equation (minimum
INDEX 843
Fog formation in distillation columns,
635
Formaldehyde, purification of, 505-506
Fouling of evaporators, 749
Fourier number, defined, 523
Fractional extraction, 163, 338-341
Fractionation index, 433-434
Fragrances, purification of, 412-413
Free energy of separation, 661-666
Freeze concentration, 104-109,
724-725, 755
Freeze drying, 21, 554, 589-590, 755
Freezing (see Crystallization)
Frontal analysis, 178-179
Froth regime, 600-601, 627-628
Fruit juices:
concentration and dehydration,
747-756
essence recovery, 250-251, 750-751
evaporation, 748-750
freeze concentration, 104-109, 755
volatiles loss, 748-756
Functions, choice of, 75-81, 784
Gas chromatography, 183-185
(See also Chromatography)
Gas permeation, 24, 138-139
Gas-phase control, 538-539
Gaseous diffusion, 23, 43-45, 119-121.
687
staging of, 166-168
Gases, solubility in water, 266
Gaussian distribution. 381
Geddes fractionation index, 433-434
Gel electrophoresis, 191
Gel filtration, 25, 179
Gibbs free energy, 663-664
Gibbs phase rule, 32, 61
Gilliland correlation, 428-432
GLC (see Gas chromatography)
Gradient, hydraulic, 595, 599, 601-604
Gradient solvent in liquid chroma-
tography, 384
Graesser raining-bucket contactor, 767
Graetz solution, 525
Graphical approaches:
absorption, 264-270
adiabatic flash, 93-%
binary distillation, 206-250, 270-283
Graphical approaches:
extraction: multistage, 283-293
single-stage, 96-97
multicomponent distillation, 331-333
Grid-type packing, 153
Group methods of calculation, 360-406
defined, 360
KSB equations, 361-376, 564-565
Martin equations, 387-393
Underwood equations, 393-406,
418-424
Hausen (stage) efficiency, 640-641
Heat pumps in distillation. 695-697,
707, 726-727
Heat transfer combined with mass
transfer, 545-556, 634-636
Heatless adsorption, 130
Heavy water, distillation, 622-626,
704-706
Height equivalent to theoretical plate
(HETP), 569-570
844 INDEX
Inert flows, 264
Initial values for successive-approxima-
tion methods, 497, 781
Intalox saddles, 153
Intermediate condensers and reboilers,
699-708
Internal flows, 216-218. 282
Internal reflux, 218, 282
Internal resistance, 550-552
Interphase mass transfer, 536-545
Intersection of operating lines. 220-223
Ion exchange. 22, 124-127
rotating beds, 174
Ion exclusion, 22
Ion flotation, 27-28
Irreversible processes. 678, 684-687
Isenthalpic flash, 80-89, 93-%
Isoelectric focusing, 19, 23
lsopycnic centrifugation, 25
Isopycnic ultracentrifugation, 23
Isotachophoresis, 179
Isothermal distillation. 708-710
Isotope-exchange processes, 21. 52-53.
204, 302-304,410
Isotope separation (see Heavy water,
distillation; Lasers, separation by;
Uranium isotopes separation)
Iteration methods (see Convergence
methods)
Janecke diagram, 284-285, 293
Key components, defined. 325
Kinetic theory of gases, 511-514
Knudsen diffusion, 44. 513
Kremser-Souders-Brown (KSB)
equations, 361-376, 564-565
KSB equations. 361-376. 564-565
Lagrange multipliers. 787-788
Lasers, separation by. 27
Latent-heat effects:
in absorption and stripping. 317-318
in distillation. 315-316
Leaching. 8. 22, 106-109. 172-174
v.v diagram for. 162-163
Leakage in rate-governed separation
processes, 109
Lennard-Jones parameters, 511-513
Lessing rings, 153
Leveque solution, 525
Lever rule. 90-94
Lewis-Matheson method, 450
Lewis number, 549
Limiting component, defined. 367
Limiting flows. 414â424
in energy-separating-agent processes,
415-425
in mass-separating-agent processes,
367.414-415.424-425
of nonkeys, 328-330. 401-402
Linde double column. 697-698
Linear equations (tridiagonal). method
of solution, 466-471
Liquid chromatography, 183-185
(See also Chromatography)
Liquid extraction (see Extraction)
Liquid ion exchange, 204-205
Liquid-liquid extraction (see Extraction)
Liquid membranes, 25, 763-764
Liquid-phase control, 538-539
Loading in packed columns, 593-594
INDEX 845
Mass transfer coefficients:
film model, 519, 531-532
gas-phase control, 538-539
high concentration, effect, 528-533
high flux, effect, 528-533
near leading edge of flat plate,
526, 532
liquid-phase control, 538-539
multicomponent systems, 533
in packed beds, 527-528
penetration model. 520-522, 531-532
for sphere, 523-524
surface-renewal model, 521-522
in turbulent field. 527
Mechanical separation process, 18
for energy conservation, 687-688, 753
Mechanically-agitated columns for
extraction, 765-770
Membrane processes, 24-25, 45^18,
138-139, 533-536. 586-589, 676-677,
752-754. 775
energy requirements, 684-687,
720-721
Membranes, 25, 48
Methane, Mollier diagram for, 671
Microencapsulation, 179
Minimum energy consumption, 661-666
Minimum flows in mass-separating-agent
processes, 367
Minimum reflux, 233-235, 333-336.
415-424
all components distributing, 415-417
binary systems, 233-235, 415-117
for distillations: with multiple feeds,
423-424
with sidestreams, 424
exact solution, 421
tangent pinch. 234-235
Underwood equations. 418-424
with varying molal overflow, 421
Minimum solvent flow, 286-287, 414-415
Minimum stages in distillation, 235-237,
424-427
binary systems, 235-237, 424-426
multicomponent systems, 427
Minimum work of separation, 661-666
Mixer-settler, equipment for extraction,
767-770
Mixing:
within phases, 110-112
Mixing:
on plates, 613-620
longitudinal. 618-620
transverse, 619-620
(See also Axial dispersion)
Mixtures, minimum (reversible) work of
separation, 661-666
MLHV method, 270-273
for minimum reflux, 421
with Underwood equations, 403
Mobile phase in chromatography, 175-176
Modified-latent-heat of vaporization
method (see MLHV method)
Mole-average velocity, 509
Mole ratio, defined, 264
Molecular distillation, 25
Molecular flotation, 27-28
Molecular properties, influence on
separation factor, 733-736
846 INDEX
Net work consumption. 665-666
distillation, 679-682
fractional absorption, 682-684
membrane processes, 684-687
Newman method:
for converging temperature profile,
47^476
for implementing simultaneous-
convergence method, 480-481
Newton convergence methods:
for continuous countercurrent
contactors: axial dispersion,
577-579
plug flow, 566-568
defined, 780-784
for multistage processes, 474-476,
480-483, 813-822
for single-stage equilibria. 59-90
Nickel, production of, 202-204
Nomenclature, list of, 825-834
Nondistributing nonkeys (minimum
reflux), 334,418-423
Nonideality, allowance for, 89-90,
480-481,499
Nonkey components:
defined, 325-327
distributing versus nondistributing, 334,
415,418-423
distribution of, 433-436
limiting flows of, 328-330, 401-402
Nozzle diffusion, 25
NTU (number of transfer units), 558-566
Nuclear-material processing {see Heavy
water, distillation; Uranium isotopes
separation)
Number of transfer units (NTU). 558-566
Numerical analysis. 777-784
Nusselt number, 524
O'Connell correlation (stage efficiencies),
609-610
Oldshue-Rushton column for extraction,
767-770
Operating lines, 218-220
intersection of, 220-223
making straight, 259-273
Operating problems, 70, 239-243, 448
Optimum value of absorption, stripping or
extraction factor, 367
Ore flotation, 27-28
Osmosis, 45
{See also Dialysis)
Osmotic pressure, 45-46
Overall (stage) efficiency, 609-610. 639
Overdesign, optimum, 808-810
Packed towers:
capacity of, 593-594
comparison of performance, 604-606
contrasted with plate towers, 150-154,
604-606
effect of surface-tension gradients, 630
effect of surfactants, 633-634
for extraction, 765-770
flooding, 593-594
liquid-liquid contacting. 594
loading point, 593-594. 598-599
pressure drop, 598-599
vapor-liquid contacting, 151-154
Packing, types of, 153
Pairing functions and variables. 86-88.
INDEX 847
Phase conditions of mixture, 68
Phase equilibrium:
allowance for uncertainty in, 808-810
index of values, 825-826
prediction methods, 43
sources of data, 42-43
Phase-miscibility restrictions in
extraction, 318-321
Phase rule, Gibbs, 32, 61
Phosphine oxides as solvents. 762-763
Pinch zones at minimum reflux, 333-336
Plait point, 36
Plasma chromatography, 27
Plate efficiency (see Stage efficiencies)
Plate towers, 144-150
capacity of, 594-608
comparison of performance, 604-606
contrasted with packed towers,
150-154, 604-606
entrainment in. 597-598, 601-602,
620-621
for extraction, 765-770
flooding in, 594-5%, 601-602
flow configuration, 613-620
mixing on plates, 613-620
range of operation, 601-603
(See also Trays)
Plug flow, defined, 556
Podbielniak extractor, 767-770
Point efficiency, 612-613
Poisson distribution, 380
Polarizability, 734, 736, 740-741
Polarization chromatography, 187-188
Polyester fibers, 9
Ponchon-Savarit method, 273-283
Positive deviations from ideality, 34-35
Positive systems (surface-tension
gradients), 627-633
Potentially reversible processes, 678-682
Poynting effect, 662
Prandtl number, 525
Precipitate flotation. 27-28
Precipitation, 8, 22
electrostatic, 26
Pressure, choice of, in distillation, 248,
803-807
Pressure drop:
packed columns, 598-599
plate columns, 599-600
Process specification, 69-71
Product purities, optimum, 801-803
Pseudomolecular weight, 270-273
Pulsed-column extractors, 765-770
Pumparounds, 437, 439, 440, 706
Rachford-Rice method (equilibrium flash),
75-77
Raffmate reflux, 306-307
Raining-bucket contactor, 767
Raschig rings, 153
Rate-governed processes:
defined, 18
energy requirements, 675-677, 684-687,
720-721
selection criteria, 732-733
systematic generation of, 751-755
Rate-limiting factor, 550-552
Rayleigh distillation:
binary, 115-121
multicomponent, 122-123
848 INDEX
Regula-falsi (convergence method),
778-780
Regular-solution theory, 758-761
Relative humidity, defined, 547
Relative volatility:
defined, 31
selection of average value, 397
Relaxation factor, 489
Relaxation methods, 489-490, 568
Residence time versus efficiency, 600
Retention volume in chromatography,
185, 381-383
Reverse fractionation (minimum reflux),
334-336
Reverse osmosis, 24, 45-48, 510-511,
533-536, 586-587
energy consumption, 723
Reversible processes, 661-666
Reynolds number, 524
Richmond convergence method, 79
Ricker-Grens method, 491-494
Right-triangular diagram, 284-285
Rotating-disk contactor, 12, 13, 162,
766-770
Rotating feeds to fixed bed, 174-175
Rotating positions of fixed beds, 172-174
Safety factors in design, 808-810
Salt brines, processing, 54-57
Saturated-liquid feed, 221-222
Saturated-vapor feed, 222
SC method. 480-481, 491^*94, 500-501,
566-568, 577-579, 813-822
Scatchard-Hildebrand equation, 758-761
Scheibel column for extraction, 766-770
Schildknecht crystallizer, 172
Schmidt number, 524
Screening, 8
Searles lake brine, processing, 54-57
Seawater desalination (see Desalination
of seawater)
Secant methods (convergence), 778-780
Selection of separation processes,
728-771
Semibatch processes, 115-130
Sensible-heat effects:
in absorption and stripping, 317-318
in distillation, 315-316
Separating agent:
defined, 17-18
Separating agent:
energy, 18
mass, 18
reduction of consumption of, through
staging, 155-163
Separation factor: 29-48
actual (a,' ), defined. 29
infinite, 41-42
inherent (a,,), defined, 29
molecular properties, dependence upon.
733-736
solvents, influence of, 757-763
Separation index, 132«.
Separation processes:
categorization, 18-28
computation of: multistage: binary,
208-250, 258-297,
361-398, 556-583
multicomponent, 331-336, 398-406,
446-503
INDEX 849
Simultaneous convergence:
multistage separations, 480-481,
491-494, 500-501, 813-822
single-stage separations, 87-89
Simultaneous heat and mass transfer,
545-556
Single-stage processes (see Simple-
equilibrium processes)
Single-theta method, 487, 499-501
Sink-float separation, 25
Soda ash (Na,CO,), manufacture by
Solvay process, 352-358
Solid solution. 41-42
Solubilities of gases in water, 266
Solubility parameter, 758-761
Solvay process, 352-358
Solvent extraction (see Extraction)
Solvent-free basis, 37-38, 286-287
Solvent selection, 757-763
Solvent sublation, 27-28
Sorel, E., analysis of distillation by, 208
Specifying variables, 69-71, 215-216,
791-797
Split-flow trays, 602-603
Spray columns:
axial dispersion in, 571
for extraction, 765-770
Spray drying, 755
Spray regime, 600-601, 613, 628
SR arrangement, 485^89
Stage efficiencies, 131-134, 608-641
AIChE method of prediction, 621-626
allowance for uncertainty in, 808-810
chemical reaction, effect of, 626-627
contrasted with capacity, 641-642
Hausen. 640-641
heat transfer, effect of, 634-636
multicomponent systems, 636-637
Murphree (see Murphree efficiency)
overall, 639
surface-tension gradients, effect of,
627-633
vaporization, 639-640
Stage requirements (see individual
separation processes; e.g.,
Distillation, Extraction, etc.)
Stage-to-stage methods, 449-466
absorption, 456-466
distillation, 449-456
(See also Graphical approaches)
Stagewise-backmixing model of axial
dispersion, 573-575
Staging:
countercurrent, 140-157
crosscurrent, 157-159
reasons for, 140-157
Stationary phase in chromatography,
175-176
Steam distillation. 248-250
Straight operating and equilibrium lines,
computational methods, 361-376
Streptomycin, purification of. 373-376
Stripping. 22, 110-112, 141-144
multicomponent, exact computation
of, 498-499
sidestream, 358-359
Stripping factor, 73
optimum value. 367
Stripping section, 144-145
850 INDEX
Temperature profiles:
correction and convergence of,
413-479, 484-485, 488-489
in distillation, 314-316, 331
Temperature programming in
chromatography, 384
Thermal diffusivity, defined, 510
Thermodynamic efficiency, 666
distillation, 681-682
Theta method for converging tempera-
ture profile in distillation, 473-474
Thiele-Geddes method, 473, 506
Thin-layer chromatography (TLC),
185-186
Thomas method to solve tridiagonal
matrices, 468-469
Tolerance (convergence), 781
Tomich method, 482^t83
Total condenser, 145
Total flows, correction and convergence
of, 485-488
Total reflux, 235-237
Transfer units, 558-566
Transient diffusion, 515-518, 540-542
Tray efficiency (see Stage efficiencies)
Tray hydraulics, 594-601
Trays:
bubble-cap, 147, 149, 150, 604-606
cascade, 602-604
comparison of performance, 604-606
flow configuration, 613-620
mixing. 613-620
sieve, 147-149, 600, 602, 604-606
split-flow. 602-603
valve, 147, 149, 151,603-606
(See also Plate towers)
Triangular diagram, 36-37, 60-61,
283-293
Tridiagonal matrices, 466-471
Turbulent transport, 508
Turndown ratio, 603
UNIFAC method for activity
coefficients, 43, 481
Uranium isotopes separation, 16, 44,
166-168
Valve trays, 147, 149, 151
Vapor-liquid phase separation, 15
Vapor recompression in distillation.
696-697, 726-727
Vaporization (stage) efficiencies, 639-640
Variables, specification of, 69-71,
215-216,791-797
Volatiles loss from fruit juices, 748-756
Volatility of absorbent liquid, effect
of, 317
Volume-average velocity, 509-510
Volume ratio, defined, 264
Washing, 2, 8, 22. 106-109
xy diagram for, 262-263
Water softening, 124-127, 136-137
Weeping in plate columns, 602, 651
Weight ratio, defined, 264
Weir on a plate, 146, 148
Wet-bulb temperature, 546-549
Wetted-wall columns, effect of surface-
tension gradients, 630
Wilke-Chang correlation, 513-514
Winn equation (minimum stages), 426
Work of separation. 661-666
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