The coefficients will then be compared to theoretical values. Subscription Required. Please recommend JoVE to your librarian. The pressure entering the system is about 1. An "Oxy Baby" Infra-red spectrometer, directly connected to the unit at various locations, measures gas composition, and tanks of pure gas are used for calibration. Gas absorbers are used to remove contaminants from gas streams, such as floo gas from an exhaust.
A gas absorber uses a column often containing random or structured packing material. Packed bed absorbers utilize gas and liquid streams which flow counter current to each other. The contaminant gas is absorbed into the liquid stream, resulting in reduced contaminant in the exit gas. The absorption process depends heavily on the operating parameters, which must be studied in order to optimize the process.
Here, we will investigate the absorption of carbon dioxide into water, and examine how the operating parameters affect the separation and efficiency of the system. A gas absorption unit uses contact with a liquid solvent to remove the substance from a gas mixture. Mass is transferred from the gas mixture to the solvent, with the two phases near equilibrium.
Then, the separation of the gas liquid phase occurs. The overall material balance for the absorber is shown here, where V and L are the vapor and liquid flow rates respectively, thus the component material balance for the absorbed component A incorporates the mole fraction of A in the vapor and liquid phase.
The overall mass transfer coefficient is the rate at which the concentration of one species moves from one fluid to the other. Here, KG is the overall mass transfer coefficient, PAG is the partial pressure of the gas being absorbed, P star A is the equilibrium pressure from Henry's Law, A is the mass transfer effective area, Z is the height of the packing, and GS is the gas molar flow rate per cross sectional of the column.
Mass transfer depends on the mass transfer coefficients in each phase, and the amount of interphasial area available in the absorber. Henry's Law and Raoult's Law are applied to calculate the partial pressures in equilibrium with the liquid phase concentrations.
In the following experiment, a packed column gas absorber will be used to absorb carbon dioxide from a gas stream into water. The gas and water streams enter the column from the bottom and top respectively, enabling counter flow.
The carbon dioxide composition at the inlet is controlled using valves for carbon dioxide and air. Then the concentration of carbon dioxide in the outlet is measured. Now that we've discussed the basics of gas absorption, let's take a look at how to run the apparatus in the lab.
The equipment used in this demonstration is a packed counterflow gas absorption column. The column is packed with 13 milliliter berl saddles at a bed depth of 34 centimeters. The valves at the entrance and exit of the column allow gas to escape, while an infrared spectrometer is used to measure the partial pressures of CO2 in the gas phase. To begin the experiment, switch on the master switch, then close the valve used to control the amount of water in the column.
Open the airflow valve completely and open the adjusting valve for column pressure. Set the airflow rate to the desired level. Use a minimum of 30 liters per minute, then increase as desired. Set the column pressure to about 0. Next, set the carbon dioxide flow rate starting at about four liters per minute, then set the water flow rate, also starting at about four liters per minute.
Adjust the water flow throughout the experiment to maintain a constant water level in the tank. Sample and measure the carbon dioxide concentration as desired at the base, center, and head of the column using the in-line pressure gauges. Repeat the experiment by performing eight runs. Use two different gas flow rates, liquid flow rates, and carbon dioxide concentrations, thereby enabling the determination of the most important variables in the system.
Be sure to allow the system to achieve steady state whenever a flow rate is altered. Now that we have demonstrated how to perform the gas absorption, let's take a look at the results.
First, calculate partial pressures and equilibrium partial pressures for each run, then use the partial pressures to calculate the mass transfer coefficients.
The calculated values are shown here as triangles, while the predicted values, shown as the solid line, arise from computing the operating and equilibrium lines. Confidence intervals for the model values and the mean mass transfer coefficient were plotted with dashed lines.
There was no deviation between the predicted and actual values, showing that the column is at steady state with equilibrium at the interface between the liquid and gas phases. Now, let's compare the mass transfer coefficients under the same operating conditions. The theoretical values, shown as the green and blue lines, showed similar trends to the experimental data. Whether the gas rate was high or low, the model and experiment behave the same, showing that the gas flow rate had little or no effect on the mass transfer coefficient in the ranges examined.
Finally, let's take a look at some applications of this technology in industry. Packed bed absorbers are the most common piece of equipment used for air pollution control. In these cases, gas absorbers are often called scrubbers. Scrubbers are used to remove corrosive fumes such as sulfuric acid, nitric acid, and hydrochloric acid from industrial gasses and vents from chemical plants, oil refineries, and pulp and paper plants.
The operation of removing the absorbed gas from the solvent is called stripping. This reduces the outlet temperature to approximately 7oC. A refrigerant pump is used to spray the refrigerant distilled water over the evaporator tubes to improve the heat transfer.
The refrigerant water vapour flows into the absorber and it is absorbed in lithium bromide solution. As this process continues, the lithium bromide becomes a diluted solution and reduces its absorption capacity. A solution pump then transfers this diluted solution to the generators where it is re-concentrated in two stages double-effect to boil off the previously absorbed water.
The diluted solution is pumped to the high-temperature generator where it is heated and re-concentrated to a medium concentration solution by the exhaust heat from the reciprocating engine exhaust gas. The intermediate solution from the high-temperature generator flows to the low-temperature generator where it is heated to become a concentrated solution by the high temperature water vapour released from the solution in the high temperature generator.
Since the low-temperature generator acts as the condenser for the high-temperature generator, the heat energy applied in the high-temperature generator is used again in the low-temperature generator.
Vapour released in the shell side of the low-temperature generator enters the condenser to be cooled and returned to a liquid state. The refrigerant water then returns to the evaporator to begin a new cycle. To remove the heat from the Chiller, cooling water from a cooling tower is firstly circulated through the tubes of the absorber to remove the heat of vaporization. How does an Absorption Chiller Work? This thermal energy is then degenerated in hydraulic fluid. Shock absorbers are an oil-filled cylinder.
The up-and-down movement of the piston forces small amounts of fluid through orifices tiny holes in the piston head. Shock absorbers are also velocity-sensitive. This means that the faster the springs are moving, the more resistance the shock absorber provides.
Send ». View my tire cart.
0コメント