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1/4/2011

Interphase Mass Transfer


Applied to Packed Columns

Lecture Objectives
To be able to apply the principles of interphase
mass transfer to Gas Absorption
 Equilibrium Relations
 Graphical Representation
 Overall Mass Transfer Coefficients
To be able to obtain properties of packings
 Types of Packings
 Packing
P ki Ch Characteristics
t i ti
To be able to calculate the following for a packed
column:
 Flooding Velocity
 Column Diameter
©UST Ch.E. Department

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Interphase Mass Transfer


Application:
pp Gas Absorption
p (Binary
( y System)
y )
A solute moves from the gas through the liquid.
Gas Liquid
For the Gas Phase:
NAG
y NAG = ky (y – yi)

yi For the Liquid Phase:


NAL NAL = kx ( xi - x)
xi
At the interface:
x (xi , yi) is an equilibrium point
i
interface
©UST Ch.E. Department

Equilibrium Relations
Ideal System (Ideal Gas, Raoult’s Law)
y = PAo x/P PAo= vapor pressure
P = total pressure
Dilute System (Ideal Gas, Henry’s Law)
y = HA x/P HA= Henry’s Constant
P = total p
pressure
Common Solubility Data
y = PA/P x = [CA/MA]/[CA/MA+100/18]
PA = equilibrium partial pressure
CA = weight solute/100 wts water; MA = MW
©UST Ch.E. Department

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Graphical Representation
Basic Lines Needed:
d d Equilibrium
lb and
d Operating Lines

Operating Line Equation Analysis:


V’ (Y – Y2) = L’ (X – X2) Linear in Y vs X
y x
V’ - Y2 = L’ - X2 Non-linear in y vs x
1-y 1-x
Equilibrium Line Analysis:
a) Linear in y vs x for ideal and dilute systems
b) Non-linear in y vs x using common data
©UST Ch.E. Department

Graphical Representation
At steady state:

NAG = NAL
y1
Operating Line ky(y – yi) = kx(xi - x)
y
y Tie Line
Equilibrium Tie Line Equation:
yi Line
y2 kx y - yi
- =
ky x - xi
x2 x xi x1 = slope of tie line
x

©UST Ch.E. Department

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Overall Mass Transfer Coefficients


The use of interface compositions is tedious
due to tie line construction.
Overall Mass Transfer Coefficients are
introduced using a driving force based on
difference between actual composition and
equilibrium composition.
A capital symbol is used to represent the
overall mass transfer coefficient.
 NAG = Ky (y – y*)
 NAL = Kx (x* - x)
where y* is based on x and x* on y
©UST Ch.E. Department

Graphical Representation

NAG = ky (y – yi)

y
NAG = Ky (y – y*)

yi
NAL = kx (xi - x)
y*
NAL = Kx (x* - x)
x xi x*

©UST Ch.E. Department

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Graphical Representation
Relationships:
NAG = ky (y – yi) = Ky (y – y*)
NAL = kx (xi - x) = Kx (x* - x)
From the Graph:
y – y* = (y – yi) + (yi – y*)
y
y – y*
Slope EL = m = i
xi - x
yi
y*
(yi – y*) = m (xi – x)
NAG NAG m NAL
= +
x xi Ky ky kx
x*
1 1 m
= +
Ky ky kx
©UST Ch.E. Department

The Packed Column


Gas Out Liquid
q In
Packings
P ki – solid
lid materials
t i l used
d to
t
2 provide contact between the gas
and the liquid in the column

Types of Packings:
Packingss

a) Rings (Raschig, Pall)


b) Saddles (Berl, Intalox)
c) Tellerettes
e e ettes
Packing Characteristics
a) Material
1 b) Size
c) Surface area per volume (a)
Gas In Liquid Out d) Packing Factor (Fp)
©UST Ch.E. Department

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Determination of Flooding Velocity


Flooding Velocity (GF)
This is the mass velocity of the entering gas
sufficient to cause liquid accumulation in the
packed column which will lead to “flooding”.
The design of the column should be such that
the mass velocity of the entering gas should be
lower than the flooding velocity to avoid flooding.
flooding

Gv1 = f GF
Gv1 = entering gas mass velocity
f = fraction, taken as 0.62 if not specified
©UST Ch.E. Department

Determination of Flooding Velocity


 Procedure
P d
1. Obtain liquid density (L) and viscosity(L), gas
density(G) and packing factor(FP)
2. Calculate the ratio of flow of entering liquid to
entering gas (L/G) from problem data.
3. Calculate FLG = (L/G)(G/L)0.5
4. Obt i C
Obtain Cs ffrom Fi
Fig. 14-55/14-58
14 55/14 58 (HB) usingi FLG
and pressure drop of 1.5 in Hg
5. Solve UF =CP[(L- G)/(L FP)]0.5[L/L]0.05 using
appropriate units in the HB
6. GF = UF G
©UST Ch.E. Department

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Determination of Column Diameter

 Procedure
1. Solve Gv1 = f GF
2. Solve entering mass rate of gas
(wV1)
wV1 = V1 MV1
3. Cross Sectional Area, S = wV1/Gv1
4. Diameter = [4/ S]0.5

©UST Ch.E. Department

Example

9000 L/min of a gas mixture containing 22% NH3,


78% Air by mole shall be treated in a packed
absorber using No. 1 plastic Intalox saddles. 95%
of the ammonia is to be absorbed using a water
rate which is 1.5 times the minimum. Operating
conditions are 1
1.5
5 atm and 30oC.
C
Determine the tower diameter.

©UST Ch.E. Department

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Solution

y1 x2
y1  .22 Y1  Y1  0.28205 x2  0 X2 
1  y1 1  x2
Rec  0.95 r  1.5 Ma  17 Mb  29 Ms  18 X2  0

Y2
Pt  1140 Y2  ( 1  Rec)  Y1 Y2  0.0141 y2 
1  Y2 y2  0.01391

p1  y1 Pt p1  250.8 p2  y2 Pt p2  15.85335

©UST Ch.E. Department

Solution
Equilibrium Data:

i  1  12 C  P  18
Xe
i
i i Xe  C  xe 
i i 1700 i 1  Xe
20 260 i
15 179
10 110
7.5 79.7 P Ye
i i
5 51 Ye  ye 
4 40.1
i Pt  P i 1  Ye
i i
3 29.6
2.5 24.4
2 19.3 9000
q1  q1  0.15 m^3/s
1.6 15.3 60000
1.2 11.5
0 0

©UST Ch.E. Department

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ye 
i
xe 
i
Solution
0.22807 0.17476 MV1  y1 Ma  ( 1  y1)  Mb MV1  26.36
0.15702 0.13706 Pt MV1
T 
 303  G 

0.09649 0.09574  T
.08205760
0.06991 0.07357
0.04474 0.05028  G  1.59043 kg/m^3
0.03518 0.04063
0.02596 0.03079  L  995.647 kg/m^3
0.0214 0.02579 131
 L  0.86 0.001 Fp 
0.01693 0.02074 3.28
0.01342 0.01666
0 01009
0.01009 0 01255
0.01255
0 0

273 Pt 1
V1  q1    3600 V1  32.58045 Kmols/hr
T 760 22.4

V'  V1 ( 1  y1) V'  25.41275 Kmols air/hr

wv1  V1 MV1 wv1  858.82054 kg/hr ©UST Ch.E. Department

Solution

ye i

y1

xei

x1e
From Graph: x1e  .17 X1e  X1e  0.20482 ©UST Ch.E. Department
1  x1e

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Solution

Y1  Y2
LVmin M L2  x2 Ma  ( 1  x2)  Ms
X1e  X2

LVmin  1.30822 LVact  r LVmin LVact  1.96233

L'  LVact V
L V' L'  49.8682
L 49 8682 Kmols Water/hr

L2  L' wL2  L2 M L2 wL2  897.62769 kg H2O/hr

©UST Ch.E. Department

Solution
0.5
wL2  G 
FLG    FLG  0.04177 From Flooding
g Chart:
wv1  L 
Cs  1.87
L 2
   1000   0.86376
L

Cs
Ut  Ut  2.27194 GF  Ut  G rF  0.62
  
0.5 
 G 0.5 0.05
  L   G   Fp  
  3.28 GF  3.61337
3 61337 GV1  rF GF
  

wv1 4 S
S  S  0.10649 D  D  0.36822 m
GV1 3600 

©UST Ch.E. Department

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Exercise
10 m3/min of a gas mixture containing 10%
NH3,90% Air by mole shall be treated in a
packed absorber in order to recover 90% of the
ammonia. The water rate is 40% greater than
the minimum. Operating conditions are 1.4 atm
and 25oC.
D t
Determine
i th
the ttower di
diameter
t if th
the packing
ki
used is:
a) 25 mm metallic Raschig Rings
b) 25 mm metallic Pall Rings
©UST Ch.E. Department

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