Chapter 3 - Stage and Continuous Gas-Liquid Separation Processes
Chapter 3 - Stage and Continuous Gas-Liquid Separation Processes
Chapter 3 - Stage and Continuous Gas-Liquid Separation Processes
Examples:
Separation of blood
Purification of drugs
Purification of Au
Refining of crude oil
DNA testing
Purification of organics
mixed separated Purification of water
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-2
Introduction to Separations
1. Mixtures
Mixtures: 2 or more components
Mixture classification:
Homogeneous - single phase, gas or liquid
solid + liquid
solid + gas
liquid + gas
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-3
Introduction to Separations
2. Separation Types:
Separation:
Mixture Products that differ in composition
Classification:
Force field (mechanical)
Heterogeneous mixtures
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-4
Mechanism of Separations
Phase contacts and component separation Phase Phase
solute
I II
Necessary condition: two bulk phases are
usually only somewhat miscible in each other
Possible two phases: Gas – Liquid, Gas – Solid, Liquid – Liquid, Liquid - Solid
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-5
Processing Methods
Single-stage process
P1 S
Mixing the two phases, eg. gas and liquid,
F P2
together in a vessel and then separated
Multiple-stage process
The phases are mixed in one stage, separated, and then brought into contact
again
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-6
Cascades
Three single section cascade configurations are:
P1 S
Countercurrent
F P2
S
Crosscurrent
F P1
P2 P3 P4
F P6
2-D diamond P5
P4
P1 P2 P3
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-7
Experimental Gas-Liquid Equilibrium Data
Example: SO2 – air – water system
1. An amount of SO2 , air , and water are put in a closed container and shaken
repeatedly at a given temperature until equilibrium is reached.
2. Samples of the gas and liquid are analyzed to determine the partial pressure pA
of SO2 (A) in the gas phase and the mole fraction xA in the liquid phase.
pA
xA
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-8
Gas-Liquid Equilibrium: Henry’s Law
Applied for pressure low enough that vapor phase may be assumed as ideal gas.
For a species present as a very dilute solute in the liquid phase.
The equilibrium relationship between pA in the gas phase and xA can be expressed
by a straight-line Henry’s law equation:
pA
p A Hx A Henry’s
P y A H ' x A
xA
where,
pA = partial pressure of component A (atm).
H = Henry’s law constant (atm/mol fraction).
H' = Henry’s law constant (mol frac.gas/mol frac.liquid). = H/P.
XA = mole fraction of component A in liquid. ( dimension less )
YA = mole fraction of component A in gas = pA/P. ( dimensionless )
P = total pressure (atm).
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-9
Example 10.2-1: Dissolved Oxygen Concentration in Water
Solution:
pA Hx A
0.21=H xA = 4.38 x104 xA
This means that 4.80 x10-6 mol O2 is dissolved in 1 mole water plus oxygen.
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-10
Single-Stage Equilibrium Contact
This is defined as one in which two different phases are brought into intimate contact with
each other and then separated when equilibrium is achieved
During contact, intimate mixing occurs and various components diffuse and redistribute
themselves between the two phases
Also it is in the liquid phase L (or heavy phase) with inert water C
Assuming air is insoluble in the water phase and water does not vaporize to the gas
phase
Gas phase is a binary of A-B and liquid phase is a binary of A-C.
V1 (A-B) V2 (A –B)
A
If L’ = mole of inert water C; V ’ = moles inert air B: L=L 1-x A L L/ 1-x A
L'0 L'1 L' and V2' V1' V ' V=V 1-y A V=V/ 1-y A
Since A is the only component that distributes between the two phases , moles balance on
solute A can be written as
x A0 ' y A2 ' x A1 ' y A1
L V L V where: y A1 H ' x A1
'
1 x A0 1 y A2 1 x A1 1 y A1
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-12
Example 10.3-1: Equilibrium Stage Contact for CO2 –Air-Water.
A gas mixture at 1.0 atm pressure abs containing air and CO2 is contacted in a single-stage
mixer continuously with pure water at 293 K. The two exit gas and liquid streams reach
equilibrium. The inlet gas flow rate is 100 kg mol/h, with a mole fraction of CO2 of yA2 =
0.20. The liquid flow rate entering is 300 kg mol water/h. calculate the amounts and
compositions of the two outlet phases. Assume that water does nor vaporize to the gas
phase.
V1 V2 = 100 kg mol/h
Solution yA1
1 atm yA2 = 0.20
L0 = 300 kg mol/h 293 K L1
xA0 = 0
xA1
(1) The inert water flow is L’ = L0 = 300 kg mol/h.
(2) The inert air flow V’ is obtained from,
V'= V2 (1-yA2 )
= 100 (1-0.20)
= 80 kg mol/h .
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-13
A balance on CO2 (A):
x y x y
L' A0 V ' A2 L' A1 V ' A1
1 x A0 1 y A2 1 x A1 1 y A1
0 0.20 x A1 y A1
300 80
300
80 (1)
1 0 1 0.20 1 x A1 1 y A1
yA1 H' x A1
At 293 K, the Henry’s law constant H = 0.142 x 104 atm/mol frac. (Appendix A.3)
H' = H/P = 0.142 x 104 /1.0 = 0.142 x 104 mol frac. gas/mol frac. Liquid.
L' 300
L1 4
300kgmol / h
1 x A1 1 1.4110
V' 80
V1 100kgmol / h
1 y A1 1 0.20
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-15
Graphical Representation
Cocurrent V1 V2
L1
L2
L1 V1 L2 V2
Total material balance:
Component A balance: L1 x A1 V1 y A1 L2 x A2 V2 y A2
Again if there are inert components in both light and heavy phases such that flow rates of
these inert components, i.e. L’ and V ’, remain constant, defining concentrations of solute-
free basis as:
x y
X & Y
1 x 1 y
Operating line: an equation obtained from material balance which relates compositions
of any two passing streams together . It defines operating conditions within the
equipment.
Slope of operating line: obtained from the difference in compositions of any two
subsequence passing streams
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-16
Component A balance becomes:
X
X1 X2
When there are no inert
components in the phases, y Eqm. curve
operating line representing the
material balance can no longer y2
be a straight line, but becomes a
curve y1
x2 x1 x
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-18
Countercurrent V1 V2
Total material balance: L0 V2 L1 V1 L0
L1
Component A balance: L0 x A0 V2 y A2 L1 x A1 V1 y A1
If there are inert components in the phases which do not transfer:
L' Y2 Y1
L ( X 0 X 1 ) V (Y1 Y2 )
' '
operating line equation: '
V X1 X 0
For transfer of solute from heavy to light:
L solute
V Y Eqm. curve
X0 > X1
Y1 > Y2 Y1
Operating line
above equilibrium
curve X
X0 X1
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-20
Countercurrent Multiple-Contact Stages
To transfer more solute from the V1 stream, for example, the single stage can be
repeated by contacting the V1 stream with fresh L0.
Since the stages are ideal, any two streams leaving any stage are in equilibrium with
each other:
Example: Vn and Ln are in equilibrium
The two-phase system can be gas-liquid, vapor-liquid, liquid-liquid, etc.
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-21
Total overall balance on all stages,
VN+1 and LN in mol/h
L0 VN 1 LN V1 = M
M : total flow
Overall component balance on A, B or C,
L0 x0 VN 1 yN 1 LN xN V1 y1 = MxM x and y are mole fractions
For the first n stages , This is why we write n instead of N
L0 Vn1 Ln V1
L0 x0 Vn1 yn1 Ln xn V1 y1
Solving for yn+1,
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-22
Countercurrent Contact with Immiscible Streams
Stream V contains A and B with no C Stream L contains A and C with no B
L and V are immiscible in each other but only A being transferred
If L and V vary from stage to stage, the slope Ln/Vn+1 varies
Shown in the drawing: operating line and equilibrium line
Ln Vy L x operating
yn 1 xn 1 1 0 0
Vn 1 Vn 1 line
y1 x0 yN+1
The two plots can be 4
used to determine stage 1 y4
the number of stages y2 x1 3
y3
required to reduce stage 2
the solute y3 equilibrium
x2 2
concentration from y y2 line
stage 3 yn = f(xn)
yN+1 to y1 y4 y1 1
x3
N=4
yN+1 xN x0 x1 x2 x3 x4 = xN
x
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-23
Graphical procedure for counting number of stages
1. Draw operating line.
N.B. If A is dilute (< 10%) in both streams L and V, then the slope Ln/Vn+1 is
constant and the operating line is essentially a straight line
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-24
Example 10.3-2: Absorption of Acetone in a Countercurrent Stage Tower
It is desired to absorb 90% of the acetone in a gas containing 1.0 mol% acetone in air in a
countercurrent stage tower. The total inlet gas flow to the tower is 30.0 kgmol/h, and the
total inlet pure water flow to be used to absorb the acetone is 90 kgmol H2O/h. The process
is to operate isothermally at 300 K and a total pressure of 101.3 kPa. The equilibrium
relation for the acetone (A) in the gas-liquid is yA = 2.53xA. Determine the number of
theoretical stages required for this separation.
V1 L0
Solution: y1 x0
Identification of the data given : stage 1
y2 x1
yAN+1= 0.01 (1 mole % of acetone in air entering) stage 2
xA0 = 0 (Pure water )
y3 x2
VN+1 = 30.0 kg mol/h, (total inlet gas flow to the tower )
L0 = 90.0 kg mol/h. (total inlet pure water ) stage 3
y4 x3
N=4
yN+1 xN
VN+1 LN
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-25
Making an acetone material balance:
(2) entering air = (1- yAN+1 )VN+1 = (1-0.01)(30.0) = 29.7 kg mol air/h
(3) acetone leaving in V1= 0.10(0.30) = 0.030 kg mol/h.
from the four steps above, V1 , yA1 , LN ,and xAN can be calculated
Since the flow of liquid varies only slightly from L0 = 90.0 at the inlet to LN =
90.27 at the the outlet and V from 30.0 to 29.73, the slope Ln /Vn+1 of the operating
line is essentially constant.
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-26
This line is plotted, and the equilibrium relation of Henry yA = 2.53xA is also
plotted.
Starting at point yA1 ,xA0 the stages are drawn. About 5.2 theoretical stages are
required.
Mole fraction acetone in air, yA
0.012
yAN+1
Operating line
0.008
5
4
0.004
3 Equilibrium line
yA1 2
00 1 0.002 0.003 0.004
0.001
xA0 xAN
Mole fraction acetone in water, xA
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-27
Analytical Equations for Countercurrent Stage Contact
Assumptions:
1. Constant flow rates: Ln = LN = constant = L and Vn+1 = VN+1 = constant = V
→ Operating line is straight
2. Equilibrium line is a straight line over the concentration range
x0 ( y N 1 / m) x0 xN
ln (1 A) A N
xN ( y N 1 / m)
When A = 1,
xN ( y N 1 / m)
N
ln(1 / A)
For absorption section: transfer of solute A from phase V to phase L:
y mx 0 1 1 y N 1 y1
ln N1 1 N
y1 mx 0 A A When A = 1,
y1 mx0
N
ln(A)
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-29
If the equilibrium line is not straight but curved somewhat, the slop will vary and,
Hence, m and A = L/mV will vary.
4. Calculate N.
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-30
Example 10.3-3: Number of Stages by Analytical Equation.
Repeat Example 10.3-2 but use the Kremser analytical equation for countercurrent
stage processes.
Solution,
At Stages 1
V1 = 29.73 kg mol/h,
yA1 = 0.001001,
L0 = 90.0, and
xA0 = 0.
Then,
L L0 90.0
A1 1.20
mV mV1 2.53 29.73
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-31
At Stage N
VN+1 =30.0,
yAN+1 = 0.01,
LN = 90.27, and
xAN = 0.0030.
LN 90.27
Then, AN 1.19
mVN 1 2.53 30.0
y N1 mx 0 1 1
ln 1
y1 mx 0 A A
N 5.04
ln(A)
Rearranging: k ' x y AG y Ai
line
k 'x
k y' x AL x Ai k y'
yAi
Graphical solution for the interface: M
1. Determine points yAG and xAL by sampling
y*A
2. Locate point P (yAG, xAL)
3. From point P sketch line PM with slope –k’x/k’y xAL xAi x*A
4. intersection of line PM with eqm line would determine the interface
compositions.
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-35
2. Diffusion of A Through Stagnant or Nondiffusing B
For A diffusing through a stagnant gas phase NB = 0 G phase
and then through a stagnant liquid phase L phase yAG
yAi
N A k y ( y AG y Ai ) k x ( x Ai x AL ) xAi NA
xAL
' ' Intefcae
k k
Now: ky y
, kx x
(1 y A )iM (1 x A )iM yAG P Eqm.
k ' /(1 x A )iM line
'x
where: (1 y A )iM (1 y Ai ) (1 y AG ) , k y /(1 y A )iM
ln[(1 y Ai ) /(1 y AG )]
(1 x AL ) (1 x Ai ) yAi
(1 x A )iM M
ln[(1 x AL ) /(1 x Ai )]
y*A
Substituting and rearranging:
xAL xAi x*A
k ' x /(1 x A )iM y AG y Ai
'
k y /(1 y A )iM x AL x Ai
Procedure for locating interface compositions is similar to the previous case; but
involves trial and error as xAi and yAi are required to determine the slope for the PM
line. For the first trial use (1-xA)iM = (1-yA)iM = 1 (i.e., dilute solution) and then iterate.
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-36
Example 10.4-1: : Interface Compositions in Interface Mass Transfer
The solute A is being absorbed from a gas mixture of A and B in wetted-wall
tower with the liquid flowing as a film downward along the wall. At a certain
point in the tower the bulk gas concentration yAG = 0.38 and the bulk liquid
concentration is xAL = 0.10. The tower is operating at 298 K and 1.013×105 Pa
and the equilibrium data are as follows
xA yA
The solute A diffuses through stagnant B in the gas phase 0 0
0.05 0.022
and then through nondiffusing liquid.
0.10 0.052
0.15 0.087
0.20 0.131
Given that k’y = 1.465×10-5 kgmol A/s.m2.mol frac and 0.25 0.187
k’x = 1.967×10-3 kgmol/s.m2. mol frac; calculate the 0.30 0.265
interface concentration yAi and xAi and the flux NA. 0.35 0.385
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-37
Solution
For the first trial (1-yA)iM and (1-xA)iM are assumed as 1.0 and the slope of line PM is,
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-38
Equilibrium data
0.4 P
yAG D
0.3
yAi 0.2 M
M1
0.1
y*A
E
0
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4
xAL xAi x*A
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-39
For the second trial we use yAi and xAi from the first trial to calculate the new slope.
(1 y Ai ) (1 y AG )
(1 y A )iM 0.715
ln[(1 y Ai ) /(1 y AG )]
(1 x AL ) (1 x Ai )
(1 x A )iM 0.825
ln[(1 x AL ) /(1 x Ai )]
A line through point P with a slope of –1.163 is plotted and intersects the
equilibrium line at M, where yAi = 0.197 and xAi = 0.257. Using these new values
for the third trial, the following values are calculated:
(1 0.197) (1 0.380)
(1 y A )iM 0.709
ln[(1 0.197) /(1 0.38)]
(1 0.1) (1 0.257)
(1 x A )iM 0.820
ln[(1 0.1) /(1 0.257)]
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-40
k x' /(1 x A )iM 1.967 103 / 0.820
slope ' 3
1.160
k y /(1 y A )iM 1.465 10 / 0.709
This slope of –1.160 is essentially the same as the slope of –1.163 for the second
trial.
Hence, the final values are yAi= 0.197 and xAi = 0.257 and are shown as point M.
Note that the flux NA through each phase is the same as in other phase, which should
be the case at steady state.
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-41
Overall Mass-Transfer Coefficients and Driving Forces
Single phase mass transfer coefficients k’x and k’y (or kx and ky) are difficult to measure
experimentally; it is rather overall mass transfer coefficients K’x and K’y can be
measured based on liquid phase or gas phase
The overall mass transfer K’y is defined as:
N A K x' x*A x AL
1 1 1 *
" ' ' where (1 x A )*
(1 x AL ) (1 x A)
K x /(1 x A )*M m k y /(1 y A )iM k x /(1 x A )iM
'
ln[(1 x AL ) /(1 x*A )]
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-44
Example 10.4-2: Overall Mass-Transfer Coefficients from Film Coefficients
Using the same data as in the previous example, calculate the overall mass-transfer
coefficient K’y, the flux, and the percent resistance in the gas and liquid films. Do this for
the case of A diffusing through stagnant B.
Solution
yAG 0.4 P D
From the figure, y*A = 0.052, which is in equilibrium 0.3
with the bulk liquid xAL = 0.1
yAi 0.2 M
For yAi = 0.197 and xAi = 0.257, the slope m is: m M1
0.1
y Ai y*A y*
m' 0.923 A
E
x Ai x AL 00
0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4
xAL xAi x*A
From Example 10.4-1:
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-45
(1 y*A ) (1 y AG )
(1 yA )* 0.733
ln[(1 y A ) /(1 y AG )]
*
1 1 m'
' '
K y /(1 y A )*M k y /(1 y A )iM k x /(1 x A )iM
'
1
1
0.923 K 'y 8.90 104
K 'y / 0.733 1.465 103 / 0.709 1.967 10 3 / 0.820
K 'y
NA 4
y AG y A 3.78 10 kg mol/s.m
* 2
(1 y A )*M
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Department of Chemical Engineering Mass Transfer – ChE 461 Chapter 3-46