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Membrane systems design permeate tubes

Another possibility of constructing a chiral membrane system is to prepare a solution of the chiral selector which is retained between two porous membranes, acting as an enantioselective liquid carrier for the transport of one of the enantiomers from the feed solution of the racemate to the receiving side (Fig. 1-5). This system is often referred to as membrane-assisted separation. The selector should not be soluble in the solvent used for the elution of the enantiomers, whose transport is driven by a gradient in concentration or pH between the feed and receiving phases. As a drawback common to all these systems, it should be mentioned that the transport of one enantiomer usually decreases when the enantiomer ratio in the permeate diminishes. Nevertheless, this can be overcome by designing a system where two opposite selectors are used to transport the two enantiomers of a racemic solution simultaneously, as it was already applied in W-tube experiments [171]. [Pg.15]

Spira.1- Wound Modules. Spiral-wound modules were used originally for artificial kidneys, but were fuUy developed for reverse osmosis systems. This work, carried out by UOP under sponsorship of the Office of Saline Water (later the Office of Water Research and Technology) resulted in a number of spiral-wound designs (63—65). The design shown in Figure 21 is the simplest and most common, and consists of a membrane envelope wound around a perforated central coUection tube. The wound module is placed inside a tubular pressure vessel, and feed gas is circulated axiaUy down the module across the membrane envelope. A portion of the feed permeates into the membrane envelope, where it spirals toward the center and exits through the coUection tube. [Pg.71]

Tubular systems can also be converted to thin-channel devices with the use of "volume displacement rods". In one such design ( 7), manufactured by Amlcon and Romicon, a splined core has the membrane wrapped around it, sealed, and braided to form thin-channels between the core and the membrane (Figure 17). These braided tubes are then potted in a shell and tube module where the permeate is collected on the shell side (Figure 18). [Pg.417]

Takeuchi et al. 7 reported a membrane reactor as a reaction system that provides higher productivity and lower separation cost in chemical reaction processes. In this paper, packed bed catalytic membrane reactor with palladium membrane for SMR reaction has been discussed. The numerical model consists of a full set of partial differential equations derived from conservation of mass, momentum, heat, and chemical species, respectively, with chemical kinetics and appropriate boundary conditions for the problem. The solution of this system was obtained by computational fluid dynamics (CFD). To perform CFD calculations, a commercial solver FLUENT has been used, and the selective permeation through the membrane has been modeled by user-defined functions. The CFD simulation results exhibited the flow distribution in the reactor by inserting a membrane protection tube, in addition to the temperature and concentration distribution in the axial and radial directions in the reactor, as reported in the membrane reactor numerical simulation. On the basis of the simulation results, effects of the flow distribution, concentration polarization, and mass transfer in the packed bed have been evaluated to design a membrane reactor system. [Pg.33]


See other pages where Membrane systems design permeate tubes is mentioned: [Pg.198]    [Pg.310]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.333]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.2037]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.1795]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.2041]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.359]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.141 , Pg.141 ]




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