Title: ChE 427 NOVEL TOPICS in SEPARATION PROCESSES
 1ChE 427NOVEL TOPICS in SEPARATION PROCESSES
Instructor Prof. Dr. Hayrettin YücelAssistant 
Ms. Hale Ay 
 2A Chemical process
-  an integrated series of reactions and associated 
operating steps whereby available materials are 
converted into a desired product 
In a typical chemical process
-  physical treatment is made
 
-  for raw materials 
 -  purification 
 -  mixing 
 -  grinding
 
-  for products 
 -  recovery 
 -  separation 
 -  purification
 
-  unused reactants are separated and recycled back 
to the reaction step 
  3Raw Materials
1. Naturally occurring raw materials 2. Plant or 
animal matter 3. Chemical intermediates 4. 
Chemicals of commerce 5. Waste products
  4Chemical Process 
 5Separation processes play critical roles in 
industry
-  the removal of impurities from raw materials 
 -  purification of products 
 -  separation of recycles 
 -  removal of contaminants from air/water effluents
 
Overall separation processes account for 40-70  
of both capital and operating costs in industry 
 6Procedures for separating the components of 
mixtures
- 1. Mechanical separations 
 -  Useful for separating solid particles or liquid 
drops  -  based on physical differences between particles 
 
Examples filtration, sieving, sedimentation, 
decantation 
 7- 2. Mass Transfer Operations 
 -  involve phase changes or transfer from one phase 
to another  
Examples distillation, absorption, extraction, 
leaching, humidification/dehumidification, 
crystallization  
 8Separations include
1. Enrichment 2. Concentration 3. Purification 4. 
Refining 5. Isolation 
 9GENERAL SEPARATION TECHNIQUES
phase creation
phase addition
barrier
solid agent
force field 
 10Separation by phase addition or creation
Feed A homogeneous, single phase solution (gas, 
liquid or solid) Principle Before separation of 
species a second phase must often be developed or 
added. 
The second phase may be created by
1) Energy-separating agent (ESA) 2) Mass 
separating agent (MSA) 
 11Phase Creation
Phase Addition 
 12ESA may involve
1) heat transfer and/or 2) shaft work 
to or from the mixture to be separated. 3) 
pressure change
Example Vapor may be created from a liquid phase
1) adding heat 2) by pressure reduction 
 13Examples for separation involving ESA
1) Partial condensation or vaporization 2) 
Evaporation 3) Distillation 4) Crystallization 5) 
Sublimation/desublimation 
 14Examples for separation involving MSA
1) Absorption 2) Extraction 
Examples for separation involving both ESA and 
MSA
1) Extractive distillation 2) Azeotropic 
distillation 
 15Barrier 
 16Separation by a barrier
microporous and nonporous membranes
Membrane materials
Membrane forms
Membrane operations 
1. Osmosis 2. Reverse osmosis 3. Dialysis 4. 
Microfiltration 5. Ultrafiltration 6. 
Pervaporation 7. Gas permeation 8.Liquid membrane
1. Natural fibers 2. Synthetic polymers 3. 
Ceramics 4. Metals
1. Flat sheets 2. Tubes 3. Hollow fibers 4. 
Spiral-wound sheets 
 17Solid Agent
Force field 
 18Separation by a solid agent and and external 
field 
External field
Solid agent
1. Centrifugation 2. Thermal diffusion 3. 
Electrolysis 4. Electrodialysis 5. 
Electrophoresis 6. Field-flow fractionation
1. Adsorption 2. Chromatography 3. Ion exchange 
 19FRACTIONAL RECOVERY  SEPARATION FACTOR
W molar(mass) flow rate X, Y, Z mole(mass) 
fraction 
 20FRACTIONAL RECOVERY (Split fraction)
The ratio of the amount of a key component j 
appearing in the product stream to that in the 
feed stream 
 21Split ratio , SRJ
The ratio of the amount of a key component j 
appearing in the product stream to that in the 
byproduct stream 
 22Separation Factor , SFJK
The ratio of the split ratio of a key component 
J to the split ratio of component K. Components 
J and K are chosen such that the separation 
favors J in the product stream and K in the 
byproduct stream i.e. SRJ gt 1 SRKlt 1 so 
that SFJK gt 1 
 23Ffficiency
Capacity 
 24STEPS COMMON TO DESIGNING ALL SEPARATION PROCESSES
1. Establish bases a) Composition of feed and 
products b) Rate to be processed c) Operating 
conditions (temperature, pressure) d) Special 
conditions (presence of suspended solids or 
excursions of pH, temperature or pressure)
2. Obtain basic data a) Phase equilibrium or flux 
data (for membranes) b) Density, viscosity, 
diffusion coefficients c) Efficiency or mass 
transfer data (use plant data available) 
 253. Perform process selection a) Critically 
influenced by bases and basic data b) Complete 
performance and economic evaluations
4. Complete process design a) Verify economics b) 
may need to change process selection 
 26Ease of scale-up the Common Separation Operations 
 27Technological and use maturities of separation 
processes 
 28Distillation 
most common type of separation 90-95  of all 
separations
Advantages 1. has a simple flow sheet 2. has 
relatively low capital investment 3. is hard to 
beat if 
-  components have a relative volatility of 1.2 or 
more  -  components are thermally stable
 
  29Disadvantages 1. has a low energy efficiency 2. 
requires thermal stability of compound at its 
boiling point 3. may not be attractive when
-  azeotropes are involved or 
 -  it is necessary to separate high boiling 
components, present in small concentrations, from 
large forms of a diluent, such as water. 
  30Factors favoring distillation
-  Relative volatility is greater than 1.2 
 -  Products are thermally stable 
 -  Rate is 2500-4500 kg/day or more 
 -  High corrosion rates/unwanted side reactions 
/explosive conditions do not exist 
  31Conclusion
Though not energy efficient distillation is a 
well established separation and is the 
benchmark with which all newer processes must be 
compared.