distillation column

131
EKC 451:Proces Design& Analysis Mass Transfer Equipment Design DISTILLATION COLUMN DESIGN By Prof. Subhash Bhatia

Upload: jasonlzy

Post on 02-Dec-2014

209 views

Category:

Documents


28 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Distillation Column

EKC 451:Proces Design& Analysis

Mass Transfer Equipment Design

DISTILLATION COLUMN DESIGNBy

Prof. Subhash Bhatia

User
Typewritten Text
User
Typewritten Text
Zainal Ahmad, PhD
User
Typewritten Text
User
Typewritten Text
User
Typewritten Text
Page 2: Distillation Column

Objectives1. Be able to determine the column operating conditions of pressure

and temperature and type of condenser to use.2. Be able to determine the number of equilibrium stages and reflux

required.3. Be able to select an appropriate contacting method( plates or

packing).4. Be able to determine the number of actual plates or packing

height required, together with feed and product locations.5. Be able to determine the tower diameter.6. Be able to determine other factors that may influence tower

operation.7. Be able to determine the auxiliary equipment required for the

tower.8. Be able to determine the hole size of sieve tray, down comer size

and internal details of the distillation column.

Page 3: Distillation Column

Distillation Column Design

Specify the degree of separation required: set product specificationsSelect the operating conditions: Batch or continuous; operating pressureSelect the type of contacting device: plates or packingDetermine the stage and reflux requirements: the number of equilibrium stages.

Page 4: Distillation Column

Distillation Column DesignSize the column: Diameter, number of real stages.Design the column internals: plates, distributors, packing supports.Design of condenser and reboiler.Select the material of construction of all parts. Design the suitable insulation system.Mechanical Design: Vessel, internal fittings and skirt support for the vessel.SpecificationsEngineering Drawing with all the dimensions and details of column and its auxiliaries using AUTOCAD.

Page 5: Distillation Column

Industrial Separation Processes

Page 6: Distillation Column
Page 7: Distillation Column
Page 8: Distillation Column

DistillationThe separation process exploits the differences in the vapor pressure of the key components in the mixture.

The relative volatilities between key components to be separatedcan be as low as 1.2.

The separation process has the ability to handle wide ranges of feed concentrations and throughputs while producing a high purity product.

Distillation can be at disadvantageous when temperature is too low (- 40C) or high temperature ( 250C).If operating pressure are lessthan about 2kPa, column size and vacuum costs also escalate rapidly. Pressure greater than 5Mpa will result in an escalation of column costs.

Page 9: Distillation Column

Distillation as Separation ProcessDistillation is the least expensive means of separating mixtures of liquids.If relative volatilities of two components with neighboring boiling points is less than 1.1 or so distillation becomes very expensive, i.e.:- large reflux ratio- large vapor rate- large column diameter- large condensers- large reboilers (steam consumption high)

Page 10: Distillation Column

Separation Equipment: Distillation Column

2 basic approaches:

- Design: New column to determine the column diameter and height required to achieve a specific separation. Stage to stage calculations: No. of equilibrium stages.

- Rating: Existing column of given diameter and height. Flow capacity and separation are to be determined.

Page 11: Distillation Column
Page 12: Distillation Column

Design of Distillation Column ( Steps)

Set the product specificationsSet the operating pressureDetermine the number of theoretical stages required and the energy requirements.Determine the actual number of trays or height of packing needed and the column diameter.Design the column internals, which involve determining the dimensions of the trays, packing, liquid and vapor distribution systems and so on.Carry out the mechanical design to determine the thickness of the vessel walls, internal fittings and so on.

Page 13: Distillation Column

Design of Distillation Column1. Distribution of light and heavy key componentsLight Key Component: It is a component of the feed

mixture which is desired to be kept out of the bottom product.

Heavy key component: It is a component of feed mixture which is desired to be kept out of the top product.

If the light key and heavy key components are selected as per the order of volatility then they are known as adjacent keys. If any other component lies between them, then they are known as split keys.

Key components are the two components of the feed mixture between which one likes to make the sharp separation. More volatile key component is called light key and less volatile component is called heavy key.

Page 14: Distillation Column

Design Parameters

- Min. no. of theoretical trays (Underwood –Frenske Equation)

- Distribution of non keys between the overheads and bottom products

- Minimum reflux- Operating reflux- No. of theoretical trays- Location of the feed tray- Tray efficiencies

Page 15: Distillation Column

Shortcut Procedures for Equipment Design

We use shortcut procedures for equipment design when use screen process alternatives.

Distillation Column- Short cut method- Rigorous tray by tray calculation

Page 16: Distillation Column

Overhead and Bottom Compositions- Fixed by product purity specifications- Rule of thumb:

- 99.5% recovery of light key in the overhead.- 99.5% of the heavy key in the bottoms.

Column Pressure- Operating pressure of a column normally is fixed by the

economic desirability of using a condenser supplied with cooling water (90oF) from the cooling tower.

- If the bubble point of the overhead mixture from the column is greater than 130oF, which allows a temperature driving force of 10oF at the condenser outlet, then we can use a total condenser and operate the column at atmospheric pressure.

Page 17: Distillation Column
Page 18: Distillation Column

Estimating Bubble Points and Dew PointsDew Point:

yi =Ki xi

Bubble PointEstimate

Calculate K value for the light key to estimate the temperature

KKK

H

ii =α iii xKy ∑∑ ==1

∑∑==

ii

ii

ii

iii x

xxK

xKy

αα

∑==

ii

ii

i

i

xK

xy

αα

Page 19: Distillation Column

Dew Point

Estimate Ki for light key and estimate the temperature

Relative Volatility

∑==

ii

ii

i

i

yx

Kxy

α/

1

bottomtopavg ααα .=

Page 20: Distillation Column

Dew point and Bubble point

Top most temperature=Dew point temperature of overhead vaporUse Antoine equation: vapor pressure of any component as a function of temperature. This equation is used in calculating K values at any temperature.Bottom most temperature=Bubble point of the bottom product.

Page 21: Distillation Column

Distillation Column Design (Sieve Trays)

1) Establish the composition and physical properties of the feed and products, the feed rate and any special constrains such as maximum temperature and pressure drop.

2) Selection of design variables:- Operating pressure: an increase in operating pressure is reflection of an increase in separation difficulty, an increase in reboiler and condenser temperature

Page 22: Distillation Column

- The operating pressure should be selected so that the bubble point of the overhead products is at least 5 to 10oC above the cooling water temperature.

- Reflux ratio: 1.2 times the minimum reflux ratio.- Feed condition: requires more heat in the reboiler and

less cooling in the condenser.

3) Physical equilibrium data- V-L-E data (binary system)- Watson, NRTL and UNIQUAC models, UNIFAC ---multicomponent as well as binary mixtures.

Page 23: Distillation Column

4) Determination of No. of equilibrium stages: Fenske –Underwood – Gilliland’s Method ( FUG Method)Minimum No. of stages, Nmin

xLK = mol fraction of the light keyxHK = mol fraction of the heavy key

= the average geometric relative volatility of the LK to the HK.

This average value is calculated by using the dew point temperature of the assumed overhead product and bubble point temperature of the assumed bottom product. Thus:

Page 24: Distillation Column

Minimum Reflux Ratio

Where the average geometric relative volatility of component I in the mixture relative to the heavy key

= mol fraction of the component i in the feed.= mols of saturated liquid on the feed tray per mol of

feedvalue is obtained by trial and error and lies between

the relative volatilities of the two key components.

Page 25: Distillation Column

Minimum reflux Rmin

And number of equilibrium stages, N s given by:

Where R is the operating reflux selected by the designer.The distribution of non key component is distillate and bottoms is given as:

Page 26: Distillation Column

Finite Reflux conditions for Multicomponent Mixtures

Minimum Reflux ratio from Underwood equation.Minimum number of stages from Fenske equation.Empirical relationship of Gilliland:

Y= 0.2788-1.3154X + 0.4114 X 0.291 + 0.8268ln X+ 0.902 ln( X+ 1/X)

Where X= (R- R min)/ ( R+1) and Y= ( N-Nmin)/(N+1)

The above equation can be used to estimate number of theoretical stages the column requires.

Page 27: Distillation Column

xB,i = mol fraction of component I in the bottoms.xD,i = mol fraction of component, I in the distillate.

Kirkbride’s method: the ratio of trays above and below the feed point allows estimation of the feed tray location:

Where B and D are the mol flow rates of the bottoms and distillate respectively and ND and NB are the number of equilibrium stages above and below the feed tray respectively.

Page 28: Distillation Column

5) Selection of the Column Internals- Trays – operating pressure & liquid flow rate high, diameter is large.

- Random packings – small column diameter.- Structural packings, low pressure or vacuum operation,

low liquid holdup, low delta P.

6) Diameter evaluation for columns with sieve traysColumn diameter requires calculation of net vapor velocity to be maintained in the column for distillation operation and depends on the hydrodynamics of the column, tray spacing and properties of liquid and vapor.

Page 29: Distillation Column

Distillation column design ( Height of the Column)

Sieve trays column use tray efficiency to obtain total number of trays in the column.Random packing: Height calculated from NTU and HTU calculations.Structured Packing: Calculation of HETP.

H = N x HETPHETP= 0.3 to 0.9 for random packing

= 0.2 to 0.7 for structured packing

Page 30: Distillation Column

Diameter

Page 31: Distillation Column

Diameter

Page 32: Distillation Column

Diameter evaluation for Column with Sieve Trays

Determination of the column diameter requires calculation of the net vapor (gas) velocity at flood conditions, Vnf

Where Csb: Souders and Brown factor at flood conditions in m/s (Figure 15-5, depends on tray spacing)

Page 33: Distillation Column
Page 34: Distillation Column

σ = surface tension, dyne/cmρL = density of liquidρV = density of vaporStandard tray spacings for large-diameter column = 0.46 or 0.61 m.

The actual vapor velocity, Vact

Vn = Vact = 0.5 to 0.9 Vnf

The net column area is

and Ac = An + Ad

Page 35: Distillation Column

Where An is the net column area. Ad is the down comer area.Ac = cross sectional area of the column

= volumetric flow rate of vapor

Column diameter,

Height of the Column (Sieve trays)- Overall Tray Efficiency, Eo

= Liquid viscosity of the feed mixture

Page 36: Distillation Column

The actual column height, Hc

Hs = the tray spacing= the additional height required for column operation

Page 37: Distillation Column

O’ Connell’s CorrelationO’ Connell’s CorrelationOverall column efficiency

Page 38: Distillation Column

Entrainment

Page 39: Distillation Column

Example

Page 40: Distillation Column

Solution

Page 41: Distillation Column
Page 42: Distillation Column
Page 43: Distillation Column
Page 44: Distillation Column
Page 45: Distillation Column

Approximate Column Sizing

Page 46: Distillation Column

The number of actual trays in the column is then Nact = N/Eo

Eo = overall efficiency (=0.5)

Number of trays for a gas absorberThe design of plate gas absorbers and that of distillationcolumns have many similarities.

Page 47: Distillation Column

Distillation Column

Plate Contactors- Sieve plate or tray: Plate containing small holes but

larger holes and slots are used.- Bubble cap : Bubble cap riser contains a short pipe

through which vapor phases and pipe through which vapor phases and pipe covered b a cap with a serrated edge or slots.

- Valve plate: These are sieve plates with large diameter holes covered by movable flaps, which lift as the vapor flow increases.

Page 48: Distillation Column

Plate Contactor

Cross‐flow plates

Most  common  plate contactor  used  in distillation  and absorption column

Page 49: Distillation Column

Sieve TraysSieve tray is most versatile contacting device and considered first.Sieve trays are not recommended for the following conditions:

1. Low pressure drop , less than 2.5 mmHg.2. Very Low liquid flow rates are required below

0.6m3/(h)(m2) of active tray area.

Under these conditions look for other types ofcontacting devices like valve trays etc.

Page 50: Distillation Column

Plate Contactor

Page 51: Distillation Column

Sieve Tray in a Distillation Column

Page 52: Distillation Column

Plate Contactor

Page 53: Distillation Column

Valve Trays

Valve trays are cheaper compared to sieve trays.The openings in valve trays are covered with liftable caps that adjust themselves to vapor flow.The common hole diameter is 1.5 inch but sizes to 6 inch are available.The spacing of the standard diameter is 3-6 inch.With 3 inch spacing, the number of valves is 12 -14/sqft of free area.Valve trays are subject to fouling and defer to sieves for such services.

Page 54: Distillation Column

Plate Contactor

Page 55: Distillation Column
Page 56: Distillation Column
Page 57: Distillation Column
Page 58: Distillation Column

Tray operating in the forth regime

Page 59: Distillation Column

DowncomerThe segmental or chord downcomer is the simplest andcheapest form of construction and is satisfactory for most purposes. 1.Straight segmental downcomer 2. Inclined

segmental downcomer 3. Circular downcomers or pipes.

Page 60: Distillation Column

Tray in a distillation column

Page 61: Distillation Column

Adjustable Weir in the column

Page 62: Distillation Column

Plat layout- Down comer area= 0.12 x column area (12%)- Active area- Hole area- Hole size- Weir height

Page 63: Distillation Column

Packed ColumnsPacked columns are used for- Distillation- Gas absorption- Liquid liquid ExtractionStripping (desorption) is the reverse of absorption and the

same design methods will apply.The gas liquid contact in a packed bed column is continuous,

not stage wise, as in a plate column.

Choice of Plates or Packing1. Plate columns can be designed to handle a wider range

of liquid and gas flow rates than packed columns.2. Packed column are not suitable for very low liquid rates.

Page 64: Distillation Column

Third generation Column Random Packings

Page 65: Distillation Column

Structured Packing SulzerMellapack

Page 66: Distillation Column
Page 67: Distillation Column

Packed column with structured and random packings

Page 68: Distillation Column
Page 69: Distillation Column

Plate Hydraulic Design

The basic requirements of a plate contacting stage are that it should:

- Provide good vapor – liquid contact.- Provide sufficient liquid hold up for good mass transfer

(high efficiency).- Have sufficient area and spacing to keep entrainment

and delta P within limit.- Have sufficient down comer area for the liquid to flow

freely from plate to plate.

Operating Range:Satisfactory operation will only be achieve over a limited

range of vapor and liquid flow rates.

Page 70: Distillation Column
Page 71: Distillation Column

Vapor cross flow channeling

Page 72: Distillation Column

Flooding:At flooding there is sharp drop in plate efficiency and

increase in delta P.Flooding is caused by either the excessive carry over of

liquid to the next plate by entrainment of by liquid back up in the downcomers.

The upper limit to vapor flow is set by the condition of flooding.

Weeping:The lower limit of the vapor flow is set by the condition of

weeping.Weeping occurs when the vapor flow is insufficient to

maintain a level of liquid on the plate.

Page 73: Distillation Column

Coning:Occurs at low liquid rates, and is the term given to the

condition where the vapor pushes the liquid back from the holes and jets upward, with poor liquid contact.

Tray Selection and Design1. Set tray spacing: Tray spacing is selected to minimize

entrainment. Vacuum column: A large distance between the trays. Common tray spacing: 24 in (0.61 m)

Tray spacing ranges from 0.15m to 1 m.Column diameter Tray spacingLess than 1 m 0.2 to 0.3mAbove 1m 0.3 to 0.6mGenerally chose tray spacing as 0.3m and check the column

diameter after calculation.

Page 74: Distillation Column

Tray Selection and Design1. Estimate column diameter

- Calculate the maximum and minimum vapor flow rate

- Estimate system physical properties- Estimate flooding velocity- Estimate vapor velocity = 0.60 x flooding

velocity

2. Estimate the required free cross sectional area to accommodate the maximum allowable vapor velocity.

Page 75: Distillation Column

Plate Design Procedure

Page 76: Distillation Column

Specification of Sieve Tray Design

Hole dia, area, pitch and pattern.Blanking of Holes for less than eventual load.Downcomer type, size, clearance, and weir height ( weir height 2 inch fairly standard with weir lengths about 75% of the tray diameter).Tray thickness and material.Pressure drop.Turndown ratio before weeping begins.Liquid gradient.

Page 77: Distillation Column
Page 78: Distillation Column

Plate Area

Page 79: Distillation Column

Liquid‐Flow Arrangement

Choice  of  plate type  (reverse?Single‐pass? Ormultiple pass?)

Depend  on  liquid flow  rate  and column diameter.

Page 80: Distillation Column

Entrainment

Page 81: Distillation Column

Weep Point

Page 82: Distillation Column

Weir Liquid Crest

Page 83: Distillation Column

Weir Dimension

Page 84: Distillation Column

Perforated Area

Page 85: Distillation Column

Hole Size

Page 86: Distillation Column

Hole Pitch

Page 87: Distillation Column

Hydraulic Gradient

Liquid Throw

Page 88: Distillation Column

Plate Pressure Drop

Page 89: Distillation Column

Plate Pressure Drop

Page 90: Distillation Column

Downcomer Design (Backup)

Page 91: Distillation Column

Downcomer Design (Backup)

Page 92: Distillation Column

Downcomer Design (Backup)

Page 93: Distillation Column

Downcomer Design (Backup)

Page 94: Distillation Column

Example11.2: Recovery of acetone

Acetone to be recovered from an aqueous stream by continuous distillation. A feed will contain 10%w/w acetone. Acetone ofatleast 98% purity is wanted, and the aqueous effluent must not contain 50ppm acetone. The feed will be at 20C. Estimate the number of ideal stages required.

Page 95: Distillation Column

Results

Total number of stages=16Total number of stages below feed=9Use Sieve platesMinimum feed rate= 70% of maximum feed of 10,000kg/h.

Page 96: Distillation Column

Plate Hydraulic Design

Column DiameterLiquid Flow PatternProvisional Plate Design: check

1.Weeping2. Plate pressure Drop3. Downcomer Liquid Backup4. Entrainment5. Trial Layout: Perforated Area, Number of holes, Plate specifications

Page 97: Distillation Column
Page 98: Distillation Column
Page 99: Distillation Column
Page 100: Distillation Column
Page 101: Distillation Column
Page 102: Distillation Column
Page 103: Distillation Column
Page 104: Distillation Column
Page 105: Distillation Column
Page 106: Distillation Column
Page 107: Distillation Column
Page 108: Distillation Column
Page 109: Distillation Column
Page 110: Distillation Column
Page 111: Distillation Column
Page 112: Distillation Column
Page 113: Distillation Column
Page 114: Distillation Column
Page 115: Distillation Column
Page 116: Distillation Column

Other types of distillation Processes

Short Path Distillation (SPD): SPD is very high vacuum distillation. Operating pressure at distillation surface in short path distillation unit is as low as 10-6 bar(1 micro bar). SPD provides the distillation at the minimum possible temperature which is desirable for heat sensitive products.

Page 117: Distillation Column

Other types of distillation Processes

Reactive and Catalytic Distillation: Reaction and separation in single column.Azeotropic DistillationExtractive DistillationPressure Swing Distillation

Page 118: Distillation Column
Page 119: Distillation Column
Page 120: Distillation Column
Page 121: Distillation Column
Page 122: Distillation Column

Distillation Column AuxiliariesFor distillation columns, we also must design the condenser and reboiler.

-Requirements of cooling-water and steam.

Column condenser and cooling waterThe condenser heat duty is the heat required to completed

condenser the vapor passing overhead.With cooling water available at 90oF and being returned at

120 oF, heat balance give:

Page 123: Distillation Column

We normally assume that an overall heat transfer coefficient for the condenser

The required heat transfer area for the condenser is

The required flow of cooling water is

Page 124: Distillation Column

Reboiler and Steam SupplyIf we use steam to supply the heat to produce of vapor at the bottom of the tower, a heat balance gives:

The temperature driving force in the reboiler must be constrained to be less than about 30 to 45 oF, to prevent film boiling

We expect to obtain a very high value of the overall heat transfer coefficient in the reboiler.

With this approximation the required heat transfer area is

Page 125: Distillation Column

and the required steam supply is

For 25 psi steam where,The vapor rate in the bottom of the tower depends on the

quality of the feed q:

Where

Which is the heat required to convert 1 mol of feed to a saturated vapor divided by the molal latent heat of vaporization

Page 126: Distillation Column
Page 127: Distillation Column
Page 128: Distillation Column
Page 129: Distillation Column

Summary

Select an appropriate operating pressure for a multistage tower and a condenser type for distillation.Determine the number of equilibrium stages required for a separation and reasonable reflux ratio for distillation.Determine whether trays, packing or both should be considered.Determine the number of actual trays or packing height required.Estimate the tower diameter.Consider other factors for successful tower operation.

Page 130: Distillation Column

References

Chapter15: Separation Equipment, Peter and Timmerhaus,5th editionChapter 14: Separation Tower Design, Seider, Seader and Lewin Book, 2nd edition, Product and Process Design PrinciplesChapter 11,Separation columns, Chemical Engineering Design, R K Sinnott,4th Edition.

Page 131: Distillation Column

The End