You are on page 1of 72

Distillation

Introduction
Distillation is a method used to separate the components of liquid solution,
which depends upon the distribution of these various components between
a vapor and a liquid phase.

The vapor phase is created from the liquid phase by vaporization at the
boiling point.

Distillation is concerned with solution where all components are appreciably


volatile such as in ammonia-water or ethanol-water solutions, where both
components will be in the vapor phase.

Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium Relations


Raoults Law
An ideal law, Raults law, can be defined for vapor-liquid phases in
equilibrium (only ideal solution e.g. benzene-toluene, hexane-heptane etc.

p A PA x A

(1)

Where
pA is the partial pressure of component A in the vapor in Pa (atm)
PA is the vapor pressure of pure A in Pa (atm)
xA is the mole fraction of A in the liquid.
Composition in liquid: 1 x A xB

(2)

Composition in vapor: 1 y A y B

(3)
2

Boiling-Point Diagrams and xy Plots


Boiling-point diagram for system benzene (A)-toluene (B) at a total pressure
of 101.32 kPa.

Dew point is the temperature at which


the saturated vapor starts to condense.

Bubble-point is the temperature at


which the liquid starts to boil.

The difference between liquid and vapor


compositions is the basis for distillation
operations.

Boiling-Point Diagrams and xy Plots


Boiling-point diagram for system benzene (A)-toluene (B) at a total pressure
of 101.32 kPa.
If we start with a cold liquid
composition is xA1 = 0.318 (xB1
= 0.682) and heat the mixture, it
will start to boil at 98C.
The first vapor composition in
equilibrium is yA1 = 0.532 (yB1 =
0.468).
Continue boiling, the
composition xA will move to the
left since yA is richer in A.

Boiling-Point Diagrams and xy Plots


The boiling point diagram can be calculated from (1) the pure vaporpressure data in the table below and (2) the following equations:
p A pB P
PA x A PB (1 x A ) P

yA

p A PA x A

P
P

(4)
(5)
(6)

Where
pA, pB are the partial pressure of component A and B in the vapor in Pa (atm)
PA , PB are the vapor pressure of pure A and pure B in Pa (atm)
P is total pressure in Pa (atm)
xA is the mole fraction of A in the liquid.
5

Boiling-Point Diagrams and xy Plots


The boiling point diagram can be calculated from (1) the pure vaporpressure data in the table below and (2) the following equations:
1

Exmpl Use of Raoults Law for Boiling-Point Diagram


Calculate the vapor and liquid compositions in equilibrium at 95C
(368.2K) for benzene-toluene using the vapor pressure from the
table 1 at 101.32 kPa.
Solution: At 95C from Table 1 for benzene, PA = 155.7 kPa and PB = 63.3
kPa. Substituting into Eq.(5) and solving,
PA x A PB (1 x A ) P

155.7(xA) + 63.3(1-xA) = 101.32 kPa (760 mmHg)

Hence, xA= 0.411 and xB= 1 xA = 1 - 0.411 = 0.589. Substituting into eqn.
(6),

yA

p A PA x A 155.7(0.411)

0.632
P
P
101.32
7

The boiling point diagram can be calculated from the pure vapor-pressure
data in the table below and the following equations:
1

A common method of plotting the equilibrium data is shown in Fig. 2 where


yA is plotted versus xA for the benzene-toluene system. The 45 line is
given to show that yA is richer in component A than is xA.

Fig. 2 Equilibrium diagram for system benzene(A) toluene(B) at 101.32


kPa (1atm).

Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium Relations


Boiling-Point Diagrams and xy Plots

Ideal boiling point diagram

Minimum-boiling azeotrope

Maximum-boiling azeotrope

An azeotrope is a mixture of two or more liquids in such a ratio that its


composition cannot be changed by simple distillation.
This occurs because, when an azeotrope is boiled, the resulting vapor has
the same ratio of constituents as the original mixture.

10

Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium Relations


Boiling-Point Diagrams and xy Plots

11

Single-Stage Equilibrium Contact for Vapor-Liquid System


A single equilibrium stage is
- the two different phases are brought into intimate contact with each other.
- The mixing time is long enough and the components are essentially at
equilibrium in the two phases after separation.
V1

V2

Where
V1, V2 is a vapor

L0

Total mass balance:


Mass A balance:

L1

L0, L1is a liquid

L0 V2 L1 V1 M
L0 x A0 V2 y A 2 L1 x A1 V1 y A1 Mx AM

In case of constant molal overflow : V1 = V2 and L0 = L1

12

Exmpl Equilibrium Contact of Vapor-Liquid Mixture


A vapor at the dew point and 101.32 kPa containing a mole fraction
of 0.40 benzene (A) and 0.60 toluene (B) and 100 kg mol total is
contacted with 110 kg mol of a liquid at the boiling point containing a
mole fraction of 0.30 benzene and 0.70 toluene. The two streams are
contacted in a single stage, and the outlet streams leave in
equilibrium with each other. Assume constant molal overflow.
Calculate the amounts and compositions of the exit streams.
Solution: The given values are V2 = 100 kg mol, yA2 = 0.40, L0=110 kg
mol , and xA0 = 0.30.
V1

V2

For constant molal overflow,


V2 = V1 and L0 = L1.

L0

L1
13

Material balance on component A,


L0 x A0 V2 y A 2 L1 x A1 V1 y A1 Mx AM
110 (0.30) 100(0.40) 110 x A1 100 y A1

To solve equation above, the equilibrium relation between yA1 and xA1 in
figure below must be used.
First, we assume that xA1 = 0.20 and substitute into equation above to
solve for yA1.
110 (0.30) 100(0.40) 110 (0.2) 100 y A1

Assuming that xA1 = 0.20 and solving yA1 = 0.51.


Next, assuming that xA1=0.40 and solving, yA1 = 0.29.
Next, assuming that xA1=0.40 and solving, yA1 = 0.29.
(These point are plotted on the graph.)
At the intersection of this line with the equilibrium curve,
yA1 = 0.455 and xA1 = 0.25.

16

Relative Volatility of Vapor-Liquid Systems


Relative volatility( AB )
It is a measure of the differences in volatility between 2 components, and hence their boiling
points. It indicates how easy or difficult a particular separation will be.

AB

yA / xA
y A / xA

y B / xB (1 y A )(1 x A )

Where AB is the relative volatility of A with respect to B in the binary system.


Raoults law:

P x
yA A A
P

AB

yA

yB

PB xB
P

PA
PB

AB x A
1 ( AB 1) x A

when AB is above 1.0, a separation is possible.

17

Exmpl Using data from table 1 calculate the relative volatility for the
benzene-toluene system at 85C (358.2K) and 105C (378.2K)
Solution: At 85C, substituting into equation below for a system following
Raults law,

AB

PA 116 .9

2.54
PB
46.0

Similarly at 105C,
204.2

2.38
86.0
The variation in is about 7%.

Answer

18

Equilibrium or Flash Distillation


Introduction to distillation methods
Distillation has two main methods in practice.
1. Production of vapor by boiling the liquid mixture to be separated in a
single stage and recovering and condensing the vapors. No liquid
is allowed to return to the single-stage still to contact the
rising vapors.
2. Returning of a portion of the condensate to the still. The vapors
rise through a series of stages or trays, and part of the condensate
flows downward through the series of stages or trays counter
currently to the vapors (fractional distillation, distillation with reflux,
or rectification).
There are 3 important types of distillation that occur in a single stage or
still: Equilibrium or flash distillation, Simple batch or differential
distillation and simple steam distillation
19

Equilibrium or Flash Distillation


yA
Separator
heater

xA
Flash distillation is a single stage separation technique.
1. A liquid mixture is pumped through a heater to raise the temperature
and enthalpy of the mixture.
2. It then flows through a valve and the pressure is reduced, causing
the liquid to partially vaporize.
3. Once the mixture enters a big enough volume (the flash drum), the liquid and
vapor separate.
4. Because the vapor and liquid are in such close contact up until the flash occurs,
the product liquid and vapor phases approach equilibrium.

20

Equilibrium or Flash Distillation

Total mass balance:

F V L
yA
Separator

Component A balance: FxF V y A Lx A


heater
where
F, V and L are flow rate of feed, vapor and liquid phases.

xA

xF, yA and xA are mole fraction of component A in feed, vapor and liquid.

Material balance for more volatile component :

V
F V
xF ( ) y A ( ) x A
F
F F

x F f y A (1 f ) x A

Where
f = V/F = molal fraction of the feed that is vaporized and withdrawn continuously as vapor.
1-f = one as liquid
21

Exmpl A mixture of 50% mole normal heptane and 50% normal


octane at 30C is continuously flash distilled at 1 standard
atmosphere so that 60 mol% of the feed is vaporized. What will be
the composition of the vapor and liquid products?
xA

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

yA

0.247 0.453 0.607 0.717 0.796 0.853 0.898 0.935 0.968

Solution: Given: xF = 0.5, f = 0.6


Find: xA, yA
Basis: F = 100 mols
Applying the mass balance yields:

F V L

Since f V / F ,

V fF 0.6(100) 60
L F V 100 60 40
22

Material balance for more volatile component,

V
F V
xF ( ) y A ( ) x A
F
F F
x F f y A (1 f ) x A
Substituting value of f =0.6 and xF =0.5 we get,

0.5 0.6y A (1 0.6) x A


0.5 0.6y A 0.4 x A
Assuming that xA = 0.5 and solving yA = 0.5.
Next, assuming that xA=0 and solving, yA = 0.83.
(These point are plotted on the graph.)
At the intersection of this line with the equilibrium curve,
yA = 0.58 and xA = 0.39.
23

2nd

x=0
y-intercept= 0.834

yA

xA
3rd

xA =0.39
yA = 0.58

1st

xF =0.5
yF = 0.5
24

Simple Batch or Differential Distillation

The pot is filled with liquid mixture and heated.


Vapor flows upwards though the column and
condenses at the top.
Part of the liquid is returned to the column as
reflux, and the remainder withdrawn as
distillate.
Nothing is added or withdrawn from the still
until the run is completed.

25

Simple Batch or Differential Distillation

The total moles of component A left in the still


nA will be
nA = xn
where
n is the moles of liquid left in the still at a given
time
y and x is the vapor and liquid compositions

If a small amount of liquid dn is vaporized, the change in the moles of component A is ydn, or
dnA. Differentiating equation a gives

dn A d ( xn) ndx xdn


ndx xdn ydn

dn
dx

n
yx

26

Simple Batch or Differential Distillation


n1

x1
n1
dn
dx

ln
n0 n x0 y x n0

dn
dx

n
yx

dx/(y-x) can be integrated graphically or numerically using tabulated equilibrium data


or an equilibrium curve.
For ideal mixture:

yA
x
AB A
yB
xB
dn A dn dn A
n

AB A
dn B dn dn B
nB
dn A
dn
AB B
nA
nB

ln
Integrating

nA
n
AB ln B
n0 A
n0 B

nB n A


n0 B n0 A

1 / AB

27

Exmpl A batch of crude pentane contains 15 mole percent nbutane and 85 percent n-pentane. If a simple batch distillation at
atmospheric pressure is used to remove 90 percent of butane,
how much pentane will be removed? What will be the
composition of the remaining liquid?
Solution: The final liquid is nearly pure pentane, and its boiling point is
36C. The vapor pressure of butane at this temperature is 3.4 atm, giving a
relative volatility of 3.4. For the initial conditions, the boiling point is about
27C, and the relative volatility is 3.6. Therefore, an average value of 3.5 is
used for AB.
Basis: 1 mol feed

nOA 0.15

(batane) n A 0.015

nOB 0.85

nB n A


From equation: n
0B
n0 A

(pentane)
1 / AB

nB = total mole of B left in still, nA = total mole A left in still.


n0B = total initial mole of B in still, n0A = total initial mole A lin still.

28

nB
1 / 3.5
0.1
0.518
0.85
nB 0.518(0.85) 0.440
Total mole of liquid left in still:

n 0.44 0.015 0.455 mol


Mole fraction of butane in
liquid left:

xA

0.015
0.033
0.455
29

Simple Steam Distillation

Note that by steam distillation, as long as water is present, the highboiling component B vaporizes at a temperature well below its normal
boiling point without using a vacuum. The A and B are usually
condensed in condenser and the resulting two immiscible liquid
phases separated.
Disadvantage: large amounts of heat must be used to simultaneously
evaporate the water with high-boiling compound.

30

Simple Steam Distillation


When the sum of the separate vapor pressures equals the total pressure,
the mixture boils and
PA PB P
Where
PA is vapor pressure of pure water A
PB
is vapor pressure of pure B
Then the vapor composition is
P
P
yA A
yB B
P
P
The ratio moles of B distilled to moles of A distilled is

nB PB

n A PA

31

Exmpl A mixture contains 100 kg of H2O and 100 kg of ethylene


(mol wt = 121.1 kg/kg mol), which is immiscible with water. A very
slight amount of nonvolatile impurity is dissolved in the organic.
To purify the ethyaniline it is steam-distilled by bubbling saturated
steam into the mixture at a total pressure of 101.32 kPa (1 atm).
Determine the boiling point of the mixture and the composition of
the vapor. The vapor pressure of each of the pure compounds is
as follows (T1):
Temperature

PA(water)
(mm Hg)

PB(ethylaniline)
(mm Hg)

353.8

80.6

48.5

1.33

369.2

96.0

87.7

2.67

372.3

99.15

98.3

3.04

386.4

113.2

163.3

5.33

32

Solution:

PA PB P
Temperature
K

PA
(water)
(kPa)

PB
(ethylaniline)
(kPa)

P=PA+PB
(kPa)

353.8

80.6

48.5

1.33

49.83

369.2

96.0

87.7

2.67

90.37

372.3

99.15

98.3

3.04

101.34

386.4

113.2

163.3

5.33

169.23

The boiling temperature = 99.15C since total pressure in this temperature


is equal to atmospheric pressure.
The vapor composition are:
P
98.3kPa
P
3.04
yA A
0.97
yB B
0.03
P 101.32kPa
P 101.32
33

Distillation with Reflux and McCabe-Thiele


method
Introduction to Distillation with Reflux
Rectification (fractionation) or stage distillation with reflux is
a series of flash-vaporization stages are arranged in a series which the vapor and liquid
products from each stage flow counter currently to each other.
The liquid in a stage is conducted or flows to the stage below and the vapor from a stage
flow upward to the stage above.
V1

V2

V3

V2

Vn

Vn+1

L0

L1

L2

L1

Ln-1

Ln

A total material balance:

Vn 1 Ln 1 Vn Ln

A component balance on A:

Vn 1 y n 1 Ln 1 x n 1 Vn y n Ln x n
34

Introduction to Distillation with Reflux


In a distillation column the stages (referred to as sieve plates or trays) in a distillation tower are
arranged vertically, as shown schematically in figure below.
1. Feed enters the column somewhere in
the middle of the column.
2. Feed is liquid, it flows down to a sieve
tray or stage.
3. Vapor enters the tray and bubbles
through the liquid on this tray as the
entering liquid flows across.
4. The vapor and liquid leaving the tray
are essentially in equilibrium.
5. The vapor continues up to the next tray
or stage, where it is again contacted with
a downflowing liquid.
6. The concentration of the more volatile
component is being increased in the
vapor form each stage going upward and
decreased in the liquid from each stage
going donwards.
35

Introduction to Distillation with Reflux


In a distillation column the stages (referred to as sieve plates or trays) in a distillation tower are
arranged vertically, as shown schematically in figure below.
7. The final vapor product coming
overhead is condensed in a condenser
and a portion of the liquid product
(distillate) is removed, which contains a
high concentration of A.
8. The remaining liquid from the
condenser is returned (refluxed) as a
liquid to the top tray.
9. The liquid leaving the bottom tray
enters a reboilier, where it partially
vaporized, and the remaining liquid, which
is lean in A or rich in B, is withdrawn as
liquid product.
10. The vapor from the reboiler is sent
back to the bottom stage or trays is much
greater.

36

McCabe-Thiele Method of Calculation for Number of


Theoretical Stages
A) Introduction and assumptions
A mathematical graphical method for determining the number of theoretical trays
or stages needed for a given separation of a binary mixture of A and B has been
developed by McCabe and Thiele.
The method uses material balances around certain parts of the tower, which give
operating lines and the xy equilibrium curve for the system.

Main assumption
1) Equimolar overflow through the tower between the feed inlet and the top tray and
the feed inlet and bottom tray.
2) Liquid and vapor streams enter a tray, are equilibrated, and leave.

37

A total material balance:

Vn 1 Ln 1 Vn Ln
A component A balance:

Vn 1 y n 1 Ln 1 x n 1 Vn y n Ln x n

Where
Vn+1 is mol/h of vapor from tray n+1
Ln is mol/h liquid from tray n
yn+1 is mole fraction of A in Vn+1 and so on.

38

B) Equation for enriching section

A total material balance:


F D W

(1)

A component A balance:

Fx F Dx D Wx w (2)

Where
F is the entering feed (mol/h)
D is the distillate (mol/h)
W is the bottoms (mol/h)

39

Material balance over dashed-line section:

Vn 1 Ln D

(3)

A balance on component A:

Vn 1 yn 1 Ln xn DxD

(4)
40

Solving for yn+1, the enriching-section operating line is

yn 1

Ln
Dx
xn D
Vn 1
Vn 1

(5)

Since Vn 1 Ln D, LnVn 1 R /( R 1) and equation becomes

y n 1

x
R
xn D
R 1
R 1

(6)

where R Ln / D = reflux ratio = constant.


The eqn. (1) is a straight line on a plot of vapor composition versus liquid
composition.

41

Ln / Vn 1 or R /( R 1) . It intersects the y=x line (45 diagonal


line) at x x D . The intercept of the operating line at x = 0 is y xD /( R 1) .
The slope is

The theoretical stages are determined by starting at xD and stepping off the first
plate to x1. Then y2 is the composition of the vapor passing the liquid x1.
In a similar manner, the other theoretical trays are stepped off down the tower in
the enriching section to the feed tray.

42

C) Equation for stripping section

Material balance over dashed-line section:

Vm 1 Lm W

A component A balance:

Vm 1 ym 1 Lm xm Wxw (8)

(7)

43

Solving for ym+1, the enriching-section operating line is

ym 1

Lm
Dx
xm D
Vm 1
Vm 1

(9)

Again, since equimolal flow is assumed, Lm LN = constant and

Vm 1 VN
= constant,
L Veqn. (2) is a straight line when plotted as y versus x,
m

with a slope of

m 1

The intercept at x = 0 is

. It intersects the y = x line at x = xw.

y WxW / Vm 1

44

The theoretical stages for the stripping section are determined by starting at
xW, going up to yW , and then across to the operating line, etc.
45

D) Effect of feed conditions


The condition of feed stream is represented by the quantity q, which is the mole
fraction of liquid in feed.

Lm Ln qF

(10)

Vn Vm (1 q) F

(11)

The enriching and striping operating-line


equations on an xy diagram can be
derived as follows:

Vn y Ln x Dx D

(12)

Vm y Lm x Wx w

(13)

Where the y and x values are the point of


intersection of the two operating lines.
Subtracting eqn.(3) from eqn.(4),

(Vm Vn ) y ( Lm Ln ) x ( Dx D Wx w )

(14)
46

D) Effect of feed conditions

Substituting eqn.(2), (10), and (11) into eqn.(14) and rearranging,

q 1

x
q
x F
q 1
q 1

c pL (Tb TF )

Cold-liquid feed

q 1

(15)

c pV (TF Td )

Superheated vapor

where
CpL, CpV = specific heats of liquid and vapor, respectively
TF = temperature of feed
Tb, Td = bubble point and dew point of feed respectively
= heat of vaporization
47

E) Location of the feed tray in a tower and number of trays.


From eqn.(15), the q-line equation and is the locus of the intersection of the two
operating lines. Setting y = x in eqn(15), the intersection of the q-line equation
with the 45 line is y=x=xF, where xF is the overall composition of the feed.
In given below the figure, the q line is plotted for various feed conditions. The
slope of the q line is q/(q-1).

q = 0 (saturated vapor)
q = 1 (saturated liquid)
q > 1(subcooled liquid)
q < 0 (superheated vapor)
0 < q < 1 (mix of liquid and
vapor)

48

F) Using Operating Lines and the Feed Line in McCabe-Thiele Design

Slope = R/(R+1)
Slope = q/(1-q)
Slope = L/ V

Exmpl A continuous fractioning column is to be designed to separate


30,000 kg/h of a mixture of 40 percent benzene and 60 percent toluene
into an overhead product containing 97 percent benzene and a bottom
product containing 98 percent toluene. These percentages are by weight.
A reflux ratio of 3.5 mol to 1 mol of product is to be used. The molal latent
heats of benzene and toluene are 7,360 and 7,960 cal/g mol,
respectively. Benzene and toluene from a nearly ideal system with a
relative volatility of about 2.5. The feed has a boiling point of 95C at a
pressure of 1 atm.
a) Calculate the moles of overhead product and bottom product per hour.
b) Determine the number of ideal plates and the position of the feed plate
(i) if the feed is liquid and at its boiling point; (ii) if the feed is liquid and at
20C (specific heat 0.44 cal/g.C); (iii) if the feed is a mixture of two-thirds
vapor and one-third liquid.

Solution (a)
xF

40
78

40 60

78 92

0.440

xD

97
78

97 3

78 92

0.974

xB

2
78

2 98

78 92

0.0235

100

The average molecular weight of the feed is 40 60 85.8


78

92

The average of heat vaporization is


0.44(7,360) 0.56(7,960) 7,696 cal / gmol

The feed rate F is 30,000/85.8 = 350 kg mol/h. By an overall benzene


balance, using Eq. below
0.440 0.0235
D 350
153.4kgmol / h
0.974 0.0235

B 350 153.4 196.6kgmol / h

Solution (b) (i),


We determine the number of ideal plates and position of the feed plate.
1) Plot the equilibrium diagram, erect verticals at xD, xF, and xB.
2) Draw the feed line. Here q=1, and the feed line is vertical.
3) Plot the operating lines. The intercept of the rectifying lie on
the y axis is, xD/(R+1) = 0.974/(3.5+1) = 0.216 (eqn (6)). From the
intersection of the rectifying operating line and the feed line, the stripping
line is drawn.
4) Draw the rectangular steps between the two operating lines
and the equilibrium curve. The stripping line is at the seventh step. By
counting steps it is found that, besides the reboiler, 11 ideal plates are
needed and feed should be introduced on the seventh plate from the top.

Solution (b) (ii),


The latent heat of vaporization of the feed is 7,696/85.8 = 98.7 cal/g.
q 1

0.44(95 20)
1.37
89.7

x
q
x F
q 1
q 1

The slope of the feed line is -1.37/(1-1.37) = 3.70. When steps are drawn
for this case, as shown in Fig. below, it is found that a reboiler and 10
ideal plates are needed and that the feed should be introduced on the
sixth plate.

Solution (b) (iii),


From the definition of q it follows that for this case q = 1/3 and the slope
of the feed line is -0.5. The solution is shown in Fig. below. It calls for a
reboiler and 12 plates, with the feed entering on the seventh plate.

Total and Minimum Reflux Ratio for McCabe-Thiele Method


A) Total Reflux
One limiting values of reflux ratio is that of total reflux, or R = . Since R = Ln/D
and, by eqn.(16).

Vn 1 Ln D

(16)

Then Ln is very large, as is the vapor flow Vn. This means that the slope R/(R+1)
of the enriching operating line becomes 1.0 and the operating lines of both
sections of the column coincide with the 45 diagonol line, as shown in Fig below.
Minimum number of trays can be obtained by returning all the overhead
condensed vapor V1 from the top of the tower back to the tower as reflux, i.e., total
reflux. Also, the liquid in the bottoms is reboiled.

58

Minimum number of theoretical steps Nm


when a total condenser is used ( is constant).
For small variations in , av 1 w
where

Nm

x D 1 xw

1 xD xw
log av

log

1/ 2

1 is the relative volatility of the overhead vapor


w is the relative volatility of the bottoms liquid.
59

B) Minimum reflux ratio


The minimum reflux ratio (Rm) will require an infinite number of trays for the given
separation desired of xD and xW.
If R is decreased, the slope of the enriching operating line R/(R+1) is decreased,
and the intersection of this line and the stripping line with the q line moves farther
from the 45 line and closer to the equilibrium line.
Two operating lines touch the
equilibrium line (pinch point) at y
and x (number of steps required
becomes infinite).
The line passes through the points x,
y and xD (y=xD):

Rm
x y
D
Rm 1 xD x

60

C) Operating and optimum reflux ratio


Total reflux = number of plates is a minimum, but the tower diameter is infinite.
This corresponds to an infinite cost of tower and steam and cooling water. This
is the limit in the tower operation.
Minimum reflux = number of trays is infinite, which again gives an infinite cost.
These are the two limits in operation of the tower.
Actual operating reflux ratio to use is in between these two limits. The
optimum reflux ratio to use for lowest total cost per year is between the
minimum Rm and total reflux (1.2Rm to 1.5Rm).

61

General Design Consideration


1. A tower design is normally divided into two main steps, a process
design
followed by a mechanical design. The purpose of the
process design is to calculate the number of required theoretical
stages, column diameter and tower height. On the other hand, the
mechanical design focuses on the tower internals and heat
exchanger arrangements.
2. Many factors have to be considered in designing a distillation column
such as the safety and environmental requirements, column
performance, economics of the design and other parameters, which
may constrain the work.

The first step in distillation column design is to determine the separation


sequences, which depends on the relative volatility and concentration of
each component in the feed. King has outlined a few design rules as
follows:
1) Direct sequences that remove the components one by one in the
distillate are generally favored.
2) Sequences that result in a more equal-molar division of the feed
between distillate and bottoms products should be favored.
3) Separations where the relative volatility of two adjacent components is
close to unity should be performed in the absence of other components; ie,
reserve such a separation until the last column in the sequence.
4) Separations involving high-specified recovery fractions should be
reserved until last in the sequence.

Once the separation sequence is decided, engineering calculations follow


to determine the number of theoretical stages, operating parameters and
tower dimensions. In general, the steps included in distillation calculations
are summarized into the following:
1) Performing a material balance for the column
2) Determining the tower operating pressure (and/or temperature)
3) Calculating the minimum number of theoretical stages using the Fenske
equation
4) Calculating the minimum reflux rate using the Underwood equations
5) Determining the operating reflux rate and number of theoretical stages
6) Selection of column internals (tray or packings)
7) Calculating the tower diameter and height

Some general design rules (from Cheresources.com) that should be


considered are as follows:
1) Distillation is usually the most economical method of separating
liquids.
2) For Ideal mixtures (low pressure, medium temperature, and nonpolar), relative volatility is the ratio of vapor pressures i.e. = P2/P1
3) Tower operating pressure is determined most often by the temperature
of the available cooling medium in the condenser or by the maximum
allowable reboiler temperature.
4) Tower Sequencing :
A. Easiest separation first least trays and reflux
B. When neither relative volatility nor feed concentrations vary widely,
remove components one by one as overhead products.
C. When the adjacent ordered components in the feed vary widely in
relative volatility, sequence the splits in order of decreasing volatility.
D. When the concentration in the feed varies widely but the relative
volatilities do not, remove the components in the order of decreasing
concentration in the feed.

5) Economically optimum reflux ratio is about 120% to 150% of the


minimum reflux ratio.
6) The economically optimum number of stages is about 200% of the
minimum value.
7) A safety factor of at least 10% above the number of stages by the
best method is advisable.
8) A safety factor of at least 25% about the reflux should be utilized for
the reflux pumps.
9) Reflux drums are almost always horizontally mounted and designed
for a 5 min holdup at half of the drum's capacity.
10) For towers that are at least 3 ft (0.9 m) in diameter, 4 ft (1.2 m)
should be added to the top for vapor release and 6 ft (1.8 m) should be
added to the bottom to account for the liquid level and reboiler return.
11) Limit tower heights to 175 ft (53 m) due to wind load and foundation
considerations.
12) The Length/Diameter ratio of a tower should be no more than 30
and preferably below 20.

13) A rough estimate of reboiler duty as a function of tower diameter is


given by:
Q = 0.5 D2 for pressure distillation
Q = 0.3 D2 for atmospheric distillation
Q = 0.15 D2 for vacuum distillation
Where,
Q : Energy in Million Btu/hr
D : Tower diameter in feet.

The Selection of Column Internals


The selection of column internals has a big impact on the column
performance and the maintenance cost of a distillation tower.
There are several choices of column internals and the two major
categories are trays and packing. The choice of which to utilize depends
on the
1) pressure,
2) fouling potential,
3) liquid to vapor density ratio,
4) liquid loading, and
5) most importantly the life cycle cost.
Trays can be divided into many categories, such as baffle trays, dual flow
trays, conventional trays, high capacity trays, multiple down comer trays
and system limit trays. According to some rules of thumb, trays should be
selected if:
1) the compounds contain solids or foulants
2) there are many internal transitions
3) liquid loads are high
4) there is a lack of experience in the service
5) vessel wall needs periodic inspection
6) there are multiple liquid phases

On the other hand, packing divisions include grid packing, random


packing, conventional structured packing, and high capacity structured
packing. The rules of thumb for selecting packing are:
1) the compounds are temperature sensitive
2) pressure drop is important (vacuum service)
3) liquid loads are low
4) towers are small in diameter
5) highly corrosive service (use plastic or carbon)
6) the system is foaming
7) the ratio of tower diameter to random packing is greater than 10

Some design guidelines should be considered when designing a tray tower,


such as follows:
1) Tray spacing should be from 18 to 24 inches, with accessibility in mind
(Generally, for a tower diameter of 4 feet and above, the most
common tray spacing is 24 inches to allow easy access for maintenance.
However, for a tower diameter below 4 feet, a tray spacing of 18 inches
is adequate as the column wall can be reached from the man way.)
2) Peak tray efficiencies usually occur at linear vapor velocities of 2 ft/s
(0.6 m/s) at moderate pressures, or 6 ft/s (1.8 m/s) under vacuum
conditions.
3) A typical pressure drop per tray is 0.1 psi (0.007 bar)
4) Tray efficiencies for aqueous solutions are usually in the range of 6090% while gas absorption and stripping typically have efficiencies
closer
to 10-20%
5) Sieve tray holes are 0.25 to 0.50 in. diameter with the total hole area
being about 10% of the total active tray area. Maximum efficiency is 0.5 in
and 8%.
6) Valve trays typically have 1.5 in. diameter holes each with a lifting cap.
12-14 caps/square foot of tray is a good benchmark.
7) The most common weir heights are 2 and 3 in and the weir length is
typically 75% of the tray diameter.

The packed tower design concepts are listed below:


1) Packed towers almost always have lower pressure drop compared to
tray towers.
2) Packing is often retrofitted into existing tray towers to increase capacity
or separation.
3) For gas flow rates of 500 ft3/min (14.2 m3/min), use 1 in (2.5 cm)
packing, for gas flows of 2000 ft3/min (56.6 m3/min) or more, use 2 in
(5 cm) packing.
4) Ratio of tower diameter to packing diameter should usually be at least
15
5) Due to the possibility of deformation, plastic packing should be limited to
an unsupported depth of 10-15 ft (3-4 m) while metal packing can
withstand 20-25 ft (6-7.6 m).
6) Liquid distributor should be placed every 5-10 tower diameters (along t
he length) for pall rings and every 20 ft (6.5 m) for other types of
random packing.
7) For redistribution, there should be 8-12 streams per sq. foot of tower
area for towers larger than three feet in diameter. They should be even
more numerous in smaller towers.
8) Packed columns should operate near 70% flooding.

9) Height Equivalent to Theoretical Stage (HETS) for vapor-liquid


contacting is 1.3- 1.8 ft (0.4-0.56 m) for 1 in pall rings and 2.5-3.0 ft
(0.76-0.90 m) for 2 in pall rings.
10) Design pressure drops should be as follows:
Table 1: Pressure drop in difference services

You might also like