Title: ABSORPTION
1ABSORPTION
2CREATED BY
- ZELIHA SALDIR
- ITIR SARI
- TUGBA BEGENDI
- MUSTAFA ÖZGIRAY
- YAKUP TURGUT
3INTRODUCTION
- Absorption, or gas absorption, is a unit
operation used in the chemical industry to
separate gases by washing or scrubbing a gas
mixture with a suitable liquid . - The fundamental physical principles underlying
the process of gas absorption are the solubility
of the absorbed gas and the rate of mass
transfer. One or more of the constituents of the
gas mixture dissolves or is absorbed in the
liquid and can thus be removed from the mixture.
In some systems, this gaseous constituent forms a
physical solution with the liquid or the solvent,
and in other cases , it reacts with the liquid
chemically.
4 The purpose of such scrubbing operations may be
any of the following gas purification (eg ,
removal of air pollutants from exhausts gases or
contaminants from gases that will be further
processed) , product recovery , or production of
solutions of gases for various purposes.
5Gas absorption is usually carried out in vertical
counter current columns as shown in figure 1.The
solvent is fed at the top of the absorber ,
whereas the gas mixture enters from the bottom
.The absorbed substence is washed out by the
solvent and leaves the absorber at the bottom as
a liquid solution . The solvent is often
recovered in a subsequent stripping or desorption
operation . This second step is essentially the
reverse of absorption and involves counter
current contacting of the liquid loaded with
solute using and inert gas or water vapor .
6- The absorber may be a packed column , plate
column , spray column , venturi scrubbers ,
bubble column , falling films , wet scrubbers
,stirred tanks
7PACKED COLUMN
8The packed column is a shell either filled with
randomly packed elements or having a regular
solid structure designed to disperse the liquid
and bring it Dumped-type packing elements come
in a great variety of shapes and construction
materials, which are intended to create a large
internal surface but a small pressure drop.
Structured ,or arranged packings may be made of
corrugated metal or plastic sheets providing a
large number of regularly arranged channels ,but
a variety of other geometries exists. Packing
materials may be classified as follows,
9- rock
- 3-coke
- 4-stonaware shapes
- 4a-raching rings
- 4b-berl saddle
- 4c-sprial rings 1-wood slats
- 2-broken
- 4d-grid bloks
- 5-miscalloneous material
10Rashing rings are the most widely used form of
tower packing. They are cylindrical rings, of
the some length as the diameter of the cylinder
and with the walls as thin as the material will
permit. Rashing rings are almost always dumped
into the tower at random and not stacked
regularly. They offer the best combination of low
weight per unit volume,free volume,free cross
section and total surface of any type of packing.
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12A packed bed column contains a support plate, a
liquid distributor, and a mist eliminator. Mist
eliminators are used to condense any vaporized
scrubbing liquid. Support plates hold the packing
in place.
The advantages of packed columns include simple
and,as long as the tower diameter is not too
large,usually relatively cheaper construction.
These columns are preferred for corrosive gases
becuase packing, but not plates, can be made from
ceramic or plastic materials. Packed columns are
also used in vacuum applications because the
pressure drop, especialli for regularly
structured packings, is usually less then through
plate columns.
13Usage examples Packed columns are used mostly in
air pollution control.. The water soluble
ethylene gas ishydrolyzed to ethylene gylcol.
Packed columns are also used in the chemical
,petrochemical,food, pharmaceutical,paper, and
aerospace industries.
14TRAY COLUMN
15 Tray absorbers are used in applications where
tall columns are required, because tall,
random-type packed towers are subject to
channeling and maldistribution of the liquid
streams. Plate towers can be more easily cleaned.
Plates are also preferred in applications having
large heat effects since cooling coils are more
easily installed in plate towers and liquid can
be withdrawn more easily from plates than from
packings for external cooling. Tray columns have
got some disadvantage. These are slow reaction
rate processes, higher pressure drops than packed
beds and plugging and fouling may be occur.
16Tray absorbers are used in applications where
tall columns are required,because
tall,random-type packed towers are subject to
channeling and maldistribution of the liquid
streams. Plate towers can be more easily cleaned.
Plates are also pereffered in applications having
large heat effects since cooling coils are more
easily installed in plate towers and liquid can
be withdrawn more easily from plates than from
packings for external cooling.
17Usage Examples
- Tray columns are used in a refinery dehexanizer
to decrease the benzene content in the naptha
feed to the process. This results in lower
automobile exhaust emissions.
18STIRRED TANKS
- If the absorbtion process includes a slow
liquid-phase chemical reaction, or close control
of the process is needed, stirred tanks are
used.the gas is introduced directly into the
liquid and mixed by the stirred in a stirred tank.
19Usage examples
- Stirred tanks can be used in lime slurry
carbonation,paper stock chlorication, regular oil
hydrogenation,fermentation broth
aeration,penicilin production, citric acid
production,and aeration of activated sludge.
20BUBBLE COLUMN
- Structured catalytic bubble columns are new, very
promising types of multiphase reactors. Their
configuration lies basically between slurry
reactors and trickle bed reactors. The solid
phase, consisting of catalyst particles, is
enclosed in fixed wire gauze wraps, which are
mounted along the height of the column. The gas
phase is dispersed into the liquid phase and it
flows in the empty passages between adjacent
envelopes. The liquid phase may be operated in a
batch manner or it may also circulate in
co-current or counter-current manner to the gas
flow.
21The main advantages of this reactor type with
respect with the conventional slurry bubble
column are 1.no problems for separating
catalyst from the liquid 2.improved
conversion and selectivity due to staging of the
liquid phase 3.no scale up problems because
the hydrodynamics is dictated by the size of the
open channels of the catalytic structure.
22Usage Examples
- Bubble columns can be used to purify
nitroglycerin with water, in the chemical
industry for hydrogenation, oxidation,
chlorination, and alkylation, and in the
biotechnological field for effluent treatmet,
single-cell protein productin, animal cell
culture, and antibiotic fermentation. Bubble
columns can be used for radioactive elements
because there are no moving parts.
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24Venturi Scrubbers
25 Adjustable-throat venturi scrubber with movable
plate Venturi scrubbers can be used for removing
gaseous pollutants however, they are not used
when removal of gaseous pollutants is the only
concern. The high inlet gas velocities in a
venturi scrubber result in a very short contact
time between the liquid and gas phases. This
short contact time limits gas absorption.
However, because venturis have a relatively open
design compared to other scrubbers, they are very
useful for simultaneous gaseous and particulate
pollutant removal, especially when
26- Scaling could be a problem
- A high concentration of dust is in the inlet
stream - The dust is sticky or has a tendency to plug
openings - The gaseous contaminant is very soluble or
chemically reactive with the liquid
To maximize the absorption of gases, venturis are
designed to operate at a different set of
conditions from those used to collect particles.
The gas velocities are lower and the
liquid-to-gas ratios are higher for absorption.
27For a given venturi design, if the gas velocity
is decreased, then the pressure drop (resistance
to flow) will also decrease and vice versa.
Therefore, by reducing pressure drop, the gas
velocity is decreased and the corresponding
residence time is increased. Liquid-to-gas ratios
for these gas absorption applications are
approximately 2.7 to 5.3 l/m3 (20 to 40 gal/1000
ft3). The reduction in gas velocity allows for a
longer contact time between phases and better
absorption. Increasing the liquid-to-gas ratio
will increase the potential solubility of the
pollutant in the liquid.
28Flooded elbow
29- Venturi scrubbers can have the highest particle
collection efficiencies (especially for very
small particles) of any wet scrubbing system. - They are the most widely used scrubbers because
their open construction enables them to remove
most particles without plugging or scaling.
Venturis can also be used to absorb pollutant
gases however, they are not as efficient for
this as are packed or plate towers.
30- Venturi scrubbers have been designed to collect
particles at very high collection efficiencies,
sometimes exceeding 99. The ability of venturis
to handle large inlet volumes at high
temperatures makes them very attractive to many
industries consequently, they are used to reduce
particulate emissions in a number of industrial
applications.
31- This ability is particularly desirable for cement
kiln emission reduction and for control of
emissions from basic oxygen furnaces in the steel
industry, where the inlet gas enters the scrubber
at temperatures greater than 350 C (660 F). - Venturis are also used to control fly ash and
sulfur dioxide emissions from industrial and
utility boilers.
32Falling film
- With high efficiency in absorbing HCl
(hydrochloric) gas, H2S, HF, SO2, NH3 gas,
graphite falling film absorbers comprise of
absorption liquid distributor, cooling and
absorption section and Gas-Liquid separator.
33- Absorption liquid distributor is for film forming
and flow into absorption tube in cooling and
absorption section. - On request, cooling and absorption section has
two models basis of its heat transfer unit -Shell
and Tube and Block. Gas-Liquid separator is to
separate tail gas and product.
34Its convincing advantages and disadvantages is
following -
- Advanges
- High efficiency of absorption drop
- Low outlet temperature
- No need after-cooling
- Low flow resistance
- Easy maintenance
- Disadvanges
- Restricted by pressure
- Film breakup
- Flooding
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36 SPRAY COLUMN
Spray columns are differetal contactors. The
liquid stream enters the coloumn through one or
more spray nozzles at different heights in the
column. The droplets formed provide a large
surface area for exposure to the gas stream,with
smaller droplets resulting in a greater Exchange
area. The liquid and gas streams can flow
counter-currently or in paralel. An optimum
droplet velocity is essential because low
velocity will lead to low contact or turbulence
and high velocity may cause flooding.
37- A mist eliminator is used to separate any liquid
that is entrained into the gaseous phase. Spray
columns are used to absorb SO2 from coal-fired
boiler exhaust gases.
38WET SCRUBBER
- Wetted packed towers are the simplest and most
commonly used approaches to gas scrubbing. The
principle of this type of scrubber is to remove
contaminants from the gas stream by passing the
stream through a packed structure which provides
a large wetted surface area to induce intimate
contact between the gas and the scrubbing liquor.
the contaminant is absorbed into or reacted with
the scrubbing liquor.
39- The packing of the tower is normally a
proprietary loose fill random packing designed to
encourage dispersion of the liquid flow without
tracking, to provide maximum contact area for the
'mass transfer' interaction and to offer minimal
back pressure to the gas flow. The reactivity
between the contaminant and the scrubbing liquor
influences the system designer's determination of
gas and liquor flow and the height and diameter
of the packed bed. - A demister is fitted at the top of the tower to
prevent entrainment of droplets of the scrubbing
liquor into the extraction system or stack.
40- Wetted packed towers can be designed for very
high efficiencies with relatively low capital and
running costs. The low pressure drop associated
with packed bed scrubbers permits the use of
smaller more economical fans. Although efficiency
may be affected, a packed tower will usually
function when gas or liquor flows vary from its
original design parameters. - Usage examples
- Wet scrubbers are used by the food industry,such
as in cheese proessing for dust and ambient
moisture removal.
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42FLUE GAS DESULFURIZATIONSYSTEM
- Gas desulfurization can be accomplish by wet,
dry, or alkali scrubing.These methods are covered
in this section. - THE WET FLUE-GAS DESULFURIZATION SYSTEM
- The wet FDG system, also called a wet
scrubber, is cammonly based on low-cost
lime-limestone in the form of an aqeous
slurry.this slurry, brought into intimate contact
with the flue gas by various technique, absorbs
the SO2 in it.
43- The wet scrubbing process was orriginaly
developed in the 1930s by Imperial Chemical
Industries (ICI) in England.In the modern version
of the process, the flue gas is scrubbed with a
slurry that contains lime (CaO) and limestone
(CaCO3) as well as the salts calcium sulfite
(CaSO3 .2H2O)and calcium sulfate (in hydrate
form, naturel gypsum, CaSO4 .2H2O).The SO2 in
the flue gas reacts with the slurry to form
additional sulfite and sulfate salts, which are
recycled with the addition of fresh lime or
limestone. The chemical reaction arent known
with certainty but are thougth to be
44CaO H2O -----------? Ca(OH)2 Ca(OH)2
CO2 ---------? CaCO3 H2O CaCO3 CO2
H2O-------? Ca(HCO3)2 Ca(HCO3)2 SO2
H2O --------?CaSO3 .2H2O 2CO2 CaSO3 .
2H2O 1/2O2 ------------? CaSO4 .2H2O
45- One technique employs a spray tower downstream of
the particulate-removalsystem (electrostatic
precipitator or fabric fitler). The flue gas is
drawn into the spray tower by the main
steam-generator induced-draft fan where it flows
in countercurrent fashion to the limestone-slurry
spray. A mist eliminator at the upper exit of the
tower removes any spray droplets entrained by the
gas. The gas may have to be slightly reheated
before it enters the stack to inprove atmospheric
dispersion. - The sprayed limestone slurry collects in the
bottom of the tower and is recirculated back to
the spray nozzles by a pump. A system of feed
and bleed charges a fresh slurry, under pH
control , and discharges an equivalent amount
from the circulating slurry. The fresh slurry is
prepared by mixing the lime-limestone with water
in a slaker-grinder and stirred in a slurry
tank. The bled slurry is sent to a dewatering
system, which is in the form of thickeners and
filters or centrifuges, where water is removed
from the calcium-sulfur salts. The reclaimed
water is used to help make fresh slurry.
46- The wet scrubber has the advantages of high SO2
removal efficiencies, good reliability, and low
flue-gas energy requirements.In addition, it is
capable of removing from the flue gases residual
particulates that might have escaped the
particulate-removal system.
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48A main disadvantages is the build up of scale in
the spray tower and possibilitiy of plugging. The
prevention of such scale is essential to the
reliable operation of the tower. Scaling occurs
because both calcium sulfite and calcium sulfate
have low water solubility, normally around 30
percent, and can therefore form supersaturated
water solutions. A minimum liquid-to-gas ratio
must therefore be used, its value depending upon
the SO2 content of the flue gas and the expected
extent of sulfite oxidation. Precipitation occurs
at a finite rate, which necessitates holding the
SO2-absorbing liquar in a delay tank after each
pass. An insufficient delay time increases
supersturation and promates scalling. Another
tecnique for controlling scale is the use of seed
crystals. These are calcium sulfite and sulfate
precipitate crystals, in a supersaturated
solution, that are maintained in the
SO2-absorbing liquor. They provide sites around
which preferential precipitation takes place and
enhance the precipitation rate.
49- Other disadvantages of the wet scrubers are the
reheating of the flue gas, a larger gas pressure
drop requiring higher fan power requirements than
the dry FGD system (below), and typicallyhigher
capital and operating costs. - The waste material from wet scrubbers is a water-
logged sludge that poses difficult and costy
disposal problems.
50 THE DRY FLUE-GAS DESULFURIZATION SYSTEM
- Like the wet scrubber, above, the dry FGD
system, also called a dry scrubber, utilizes an
aqueous sliurry of lime, CaO, to capture flue gas
SO2 by forming calcium sulfites and sulfates in
spray absorbers. The slurry in the case, however,
is atomized, usually by a centrifugal atomizer,
into a fine spray that promotes the chemical
absorption of SO2 and, because of the small spray
paticle size, is quickly dried bye the hot flue
gases themselves to a particulate suspension that
is carried along with the desulfurized gas
stream. The reaction particulates as well those
carried by the flue gases (fly ash) are then
removed, mainly by a fabric fitler, before the
gas is drawn by the induced-draft fan to the
stack.
51- A major component of this system is the
slurry-generating system. A slaker meters lime
and water into an agitated tank to prepare a
slaked lime slurry which, in turn, is diluted by
additional water and processed to remove inert
impurities called grits, which are disposed of.
The lime slurry is pumped to the spray absorber
with the flow controlled by the amount of SO2 in
the flue gas. - Particulates both coming in with the flue gas and
generated in the FGD are collected from the
absorber and fabric-filter hoppers and sent to a
recycling silo for disposal or for recycling of a
portion of it with the slurry (depending upon the
extent of original utilization of the reactant in
the absorber). The recycled slurry is enriched by
an alkaline material, such as CaO, MgO, K2O, or
Na2O.
52 The main advantages of the dry system are
he dry, powdery nature of the waste material,
which poses fewer and less costly disposal
problems then the wet waste from the wet FGD
system (thought these problems are still large),
and the mechanical simplicity of the system.
The main disadvantage is that the efficiency of
SO2 removal is lower than that of the wet
scrubber. 1979 NSPS (New Source Performances
Standards) regulations, which specify only 70
percent SO2 removal in new plants, have
encouraged the developmed of the system, however.
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54Other disadvantages are the need for careful
design optimization of the spray absorber and the
slaker, and the storng dependence of collection
efficiency on absorber outlet temperature, which
neccessitates opereting as close as is safe to
the saturation temperature that corresponds to
the partial presure of the water vapor in the gas
in order to avoid condensation (below the
coresponding dew point). This poses problems with
fitler-bag performance.
55 SINGLE ALKALI SCRUBBING
- Clear water solutions of either sodium (usually
in the form of sodium hydroxide, NaoH, or sodium
sulfite, Na2So3) or ammonia (NH3) are excellent
absorbers or SO2. The advantages of alkali
scrubbing is tahat it avoids the scaling and
plugging problems of slurry scrubbing by using
alkaline earth. Ammonia scrubbing has the
advantage that the scrubber product, ammonium
sulfate, can be sold as a fertilizer, but the
disadvantage that the process produces
troublesome fumes.
56- A well-developed sodium scrubber is the
Welman-Lord SO2 recovery process, which has found
use in powerplants, refineries, sulferic acid
plants, and other industrial installations in the
USA and Japan. The process utilizes a water
solution of sodium sulfite (Na2SO3) for scrubbing
and generates a concentrated SO2 (about 90), in
effect removing the SO2 gas from other flue
gases. - The flue gas from fossil powerplants (or
nonferrous smelters) is first pretreated by
cooling and removal of particulate matter, such
as by electrostatic precipitators, prior to being
sent to the absorber. In the absorber the water
solition of sodium sulfite absorbs the SO2 in the
pretreated flue gas to produce sodium bisulfite
NaHSO3 according to - SO2 Na2SO3 H2O -----------? 2NaHSO3
57- The desulfurized gas is reheated before going to
the stack in order to improve atmospheric
dispersion. - The sodium bisulfite is sent to a
forced-circulation evaporator-crystallizer via a
surge tank. The evaporator-crystallizer is the
herth of the system. The surge tank allows steady
flow rates into it despite gas flow and
concentration fluctuations. Through the
application of low-pressure steam, such as from a
turbine exhaust, the sulfite is regenerated in
the form of a slurry according to - 2NaHSO3 -----------? NaSO3 SO2 H2O
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59- The product SO2 may be utilized to produce liquid
SO2 or sulfuric acid, on - site or in a satellite plant, or to produce
elemental sulfur. A well-known process for doing
this is called the Claus process, which is based
on the addition of H2S according to - SO2 2 H2S -----------? 3S 2 H2O
60NO REMOVAL
- A process for the removal of NO, also by the
addition of H2S, is proposed. It is given by - NO H2S -----------? S 1/2N2 H2O
- The combined removal of SO2 and NO is under
study. In both reactions, the H2S must be
completely consumed as it is a pollutant itself. - In 1977 the system was estimated to add an
additional 120/kW, or some 12 to 15 percent to
the base capital cost of a powerplant. It was
said operating costs would increase by about
60/MBtu.
61- Most scrubbers in use by 1981 have been of the
wet type. There is not sufficient experience with
the dry type to establish which of the two may be
selected by utilities in the future. Presently
all scrubber systems are large and occupy a
sizable area of a powerplant, have capital costs
that run in the tens of millions of dollars for
500-to 1000-MW plants, and consume a sizable
fraction of the gross electrical output of these
plants. They also require a lot of maintenance ,
which results in the doubling of operation and
maintenance personel and causes, consequently,
larger operation and maintenance costs. In
addition, they generate huge amounts of waste
that has to be disposed of.
62- There are two types of disposal of FGD wastes
wet disposal, called ponding, and dry disposal in
landfills, which are getting scarce. In general
utilities are not always eager to build these
disposal systems. Nevertheless, some 19000 MW of
FGD and sludge disposal systems were in
operation, and 26000 MW were under construction
or planned, in 1981. The Electric Power Research
Institute (EPRI) has published the FGD Sludge
DIsposal Manual, which incorporates the latest
waste-disposal technology and regulations and
describes how to design an environmentally
acceptable waste-disposal system and the options
available for processing and disposal of the
wastes.