Title: Design of Columns for Distillation, Absorption, Stripping,
1Design of Columns for Distillation, Absorption,
Stripping, Liquid Extraction
- Dr. Avinash R. Sirdeshpande
- Process Solutions Engineer
- BOC Gases
- Murray Hill, NJ
2Separation Process Principles - 1Mixtures
- Mixtures 2 or more components
- Mixture classification
- Homogeneous - single phase, gas or liquid
- Air - N2, Ar, O2
- Dry syngas CO/H2/CH4/CO2
- Heterogeneous - multiple, immiscible phases
- Liquid liquid, e.g. oil water
- solid liquid
- solid gas
- liquid gas
- Mixing - spontaneous, irreversible
3Separation Process Principles - 2Separation Types
- Separation
- Mixture ? Products that differ in composition
- Classification
- Force field (mechanical)
- Gravity, pressure, electrical field, centrifugal
force - Heterogeneous mixtures
- Physical - exploit differences in physical
properties - vapor pressure, solubility, molecular geometry,
surface activity, freezing point - Chemical - based on differences in reactivity
4Separation Process Principles - 3Design
- Select appropriate separation process
- Distillation differences in boiling points
- Absorption/Stripping/Liquid Extraction
solubility - Mass or Energy Separating Agent
- Solvent for absorption, e.g. H2O for NH3/air
- Reflux, reboiling by adding/removing heat in
distillation - Design equipment for process
- Proposal/Budgetary stage
- Letter of intent
- Construction
5Column Design Process
6Column Process DesignFour Basic Principles
- Extent of separation
- of equilibrium stages, predicted with high
confidence - Hand calculation - McCabe-Thiele method
- Approximate methods - Kremser equation, FUG
method - Rigorous methods - computer simulation
- Time of phase contact
- Rate (Driving force)/Resistance
- Driving force departure from equilibrium
- Resistance (difficult to predict)
- operating conditions T, P, composition
- physical properties of both phases
- velocity, flow regime
7Column Process DesignFour Basic Principles
- Permissible pressure drop
- Fixes diameter of column
- Energy requirements
- Heat
- producing temperature changes
- creating a new phase
- overcoming heat of solution effects
- Mechanical/Electrical
- moving fluids from one location to another
- dispersing liquids and gases
- operate moving parts of machinery
8Efficiency
- Actual Trays or Height Theoretical
Stages/Efficiency - (Murphree) efficiency for tray columns
- Apply efficiency factor for actual trays
- Apply safety factor for final number of trays
- Height equivalent of a theoretical stage (HETP)
for packed columns - Multiply by HETP to get total height of packed
section - Difficult to predict from first principles
- Depends on contacting device, system, hydraulics
- Experimental data and correlations
- Vendor information (see brochure)
9Characteristics of Tray Columns
- Predictable hydraulic and mass transfer behavior
- Moderate to high pressure drop per tray
- Can be scaled to large diameters
- Low cost
- Suitable for fouling service
- Feed point flexibility is easy
10Characteristics of Packed Columns
- Low pressure drop / smaller diameter
- Random packing scale-up for HETP is difficult
structured packing scale-up is predictable - HETP prediction less well developed than for
trays - Low to moderate cost for random packing high
cost for structured packing - Not suitable for fouling service
- Feed point flexibility is difficult
11Specification of a Tray Column
- Number of actual stages
- Feed tray location
- Type of trays
- Tray spacing
- Tray layout
- Column diameter
- Column height
- Feed / Offtake arrangements / Nozzle sizes
- Reboiler / Condenser details
12Packed Column Specification
- Type of packing
- Random packing
- Structured packing
- Trade-off pressure drop vs. HETP vs. cost
- Column diameter
- Height of packing
- Feeds and offtakes
13Tray Column Height
- Column Height
- actual stages x tray spacing space allowance
for feed/draws sump top volume - Tray spacing for most applications is 18-24
inches - Rule of thumb could be to add 1- 2 nozzle
diameters to the total height for feeds and draws - Sumps sized on liquid residence time. Two to
five minutes is typical.
14Packed Column Height
- HETP Replaces Tray Efficiency
- Bed Height No of Theoretical Stages x HETP
- HETP height equivalent to a theoretical plate
- HETP is difficult to generalize and is a function
of the type of packing, the system being
separated and the hydraulics of the column.
Experimental or vendor-supplied values are used.
15Flooding and Weeping
16Column Diameter
- Column diameter is chosen to provide a
comfortable range of operating between flooding
and weeping. A typical operating range is about
70 of the flooding velocity. - The flooding velocity is determined by
correlations - An approach to flooding is used to get the actual
superficial velocity (based on column diameter). - Downcomers take up about 5-20 of column area
- Diameters should be rounded to standard dimensions
17Additional Topics in Column Design
- Process Control - Steady state vs. Unsteady state
- PID development
- Synthesis of separation sequences
- Separation of difficult mixtures
- Azeotropes
- Multiple liquid phases
- Novel distillation designs