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Distillation equimolecular counterdiffusion

In distillation, equimolecular counterdiffusion takes place if the molar latent heats of the components are equal and the molar rate of flow of the two phases then remains approximately constant throughout the whole height of the column. In gas absorption, however, the mass transfer rate is increased as a result of bulk flow and, at high concentrations of soluble gas, the molar rate of flow at the top of the column will be less than that at the bottom, At low concentrations, however, bulk flow will contribute very little to mass transfer and, in addition, flowrates will be approximately constant over the whole column. [Pg.623]

When the mass transfer rates of the two components are equal and opposite the process is said to be one of equimolecular counterdiffusion. Such a process occurs in the case of the box with a movable partition, referred to in Section 10.1. It occurs also in a distillation column when the molar latent heats of the two components are the same. At any point in the column a falling stream of liquid is brought into contact with a rising stream of vapour with which it is not in equilibrium. The less volatile component is transferred from... [Pg.576]

As a result of the diffusional process, there is no net overall molecular flux arising from diffusion in a binary mixture, the two components being transferred at equal and opposite rates. In the process of equimolecular counterdiffusion which occurs, for example, in a distillation column when the two components have equal molar latent heats, the diffusional velocities are the same as the velocities of the molecular species relative to the walls of the equipment or the phase boundary. [Pg.586]

The theoretical treatment which has been developed in Sections 10.2-10.4 relates to mass transfer within a single phase in which no discontinuities exist. In many important applications of mass transfer, however, material is transferred across a phase boundary. Thus, in distillation a vapour and liquid are brought into contact in the fractionating column and the more volatile material is transferred from the liquid to the vapour while the less volatile constituent is transferred in the opposite direction this is an example of equimolecular counterdiffusion. In gas absorption, the soluble gas diffuses to the surface, dissolves in the liquid, and then passes into the bulk of the liquid, and the carrier gas is not transferred. In both of these examples, one phase is a liquid and the other a gas. In liquid -liquid extraction however, a solute is transferred from one liquid solvent to another across a phase boundary, and in the dissolution of a crystal the solute is transferred from a solid to a liquid. [Pg.599]

The term Csm/Cr (the ratio of the logarithmic mean concentration of the insoluble component to the total concentration) is introduced because hD(CBm/Cr) is less dependent than hD on the concentrations of the components. This reflects the fact that the analogy between momentum, heat and mass transfer relates only to that part of the mass transfer which is not associated with the bulk flow mechanism this is a fraction Cum/Cr of the total mass transfer. For equimolecular counterdiffusion, as in binary distillation when the molar latent heats of the components are equal, the term Cem/Cj- is omitted as there is no bulk flow contributing to the mass transfer. [Pg.648]


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