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Mixtures in condensation

VELOCITY OF FLASHED CONDENSATE MIXTURE, ft/min. TOTAL FLOW OF MIXTURE IN CONDENSATE HEADER, Ib/h. WEIGHT FRACTION OF CONDENSATE FLASHED TO VAPOR. FLASHED STEAM FLOWRATE, Ib/h. [Pg.250]

As far as the heat transfer coefficient between the air-steam mixture in condensation and the various surfaces exposed to it is concerned, various theoretical (Jakob, 1962 McAdams, 1985) and experimental (Kolflat and Chittenden, 1957 Goodwin, 1958 Jubb, 1959 Leardini, Cadeddu and Schiavoni, 1961 Leardini and Cadeddu, 1961 Uchida, Oyama and Togo, 1964) studies exist. A value normally accepted for operational water reactors (initial peak... [Pg.292]

For such components, as the composition of the solution approaches that of the pure liquid, the fugacity becomes equal to the mole fraction multiplied by the standard-state fugacity. In this case,the standard-state fugacity for component i is the fugacity of pure liquid i at system temperature T. In many cases all the components in a liquid mixture are condensable and Equation (13) is therefore used for all components in this case, since all components are treated alike, the normalization of activity coefficients is said to follow the symmetric convention. ... [Pg.18]

Separation of mixtures of condensable and non-condensable components. If a fluid mixture contains both condensable and noncondensable components, then a partial condensation followed by a simple phase separator often can give a food separation. This is essentially a single-stage distillation operation. It is a special case that deserves attention in some detail later. [Pg.75]

When a mixture in a reactor effluent contains components with a wide range of volatilities, then a partial condensation from the vapor phase or a partial vaporization from the liquid phase followed by a simple phase split often can produce a good separation. If the vapor from such a phase split is difficult to condense, then further separation needs to be carried out in a vapor separation unit such as a membrane. [Pg.126]

The material to be steam-distilled (mixed with some water if a solid compound, but not otherwise) is placed in C, and a vigorous current of steam blown in from D. The mixture in C is thus rapidly heated, and the vapour of the organic compound mixed with steam passes over and is condensed in E. For distillations on a small scale it is not necessary to heat C if, however, the flask C contains a large volume of material or material which requires prolonged distillation, it should be heated by a Bunsen burner, otherwise the steady condensation of steam in C will produce too great a volume of liquid. [Pg.33]

Hydrolysis to p-Nitroaniline. For this purpose use 70 sulphuric acid, the usual reagent employed for the hydrolysis of anilides (p. 108). Add 5 g. of the recrystallised />-nitro-acetanilide to 30 ml. of 70%sulphuric acid, and boil the mixture gently under a reflux water-condenser for 20 minutes. Then pour the clear hot solution into about 150 ml. of cold water, and finally add an excess of sodium hydroxide solution until precipitation of the yellow p-nitroaniline is complete. Coo the mixture in ice-water if necessary, and then filter at the pump, wash well... [Pg.168]

Assemble in a fume-cupboard the apparatus shown in Fig. 67(A). Place 15 g. of 3,5-dinitrobenzoic acid and 17 g. of phosphorus pentachloride in the flask C, and heat the mixture in an oil-bath for hours. Then reverse the condenser as shown in Fig. 67(B), but replace the calcium chloride tube by a tube leading to a water-pump, the neck of the reaction-flask C being closed with a rubber stopper. Now distil off the phosphorus oxychloride under reduced pressure by heating the flask C in an oil-bath initially at 25-30, increasing this temperature ultimately to 110°. Then cool the flask, when the crude 3,5-dinitro-benzoyl chloride will solidify to a brown crystalline mass. Yield, 16 g., i.e,y almost theoretical. Recrystallise from caibon tetrachloride. The chloride is obtained as colourless crystals, m.p. 66-68°, Yield, 13 g Further recrystallisation of small quantities can be performed using petrol (b.p. 40-60°). The chloride is stable almost indefinitely if kept in a calcium chloride desiccator. [Pg.243]

Now remove the flask from the water-bath, and slowly add a solution of 5 ml. (5-2 g.) of dry ethyl benzoate in 15 ml. of anhydrous ether down the condenser in small quantities at a time, mixing the contents of the flask thoroughly between each addition. When the boiling of the ether again subsides, return the flask to the water-bath and reheat for a further 15 minutes. Then cool the mixture in ice-water, and carefully pour off the ethereal solution into a mixture of about 60 ml. of dilute sulphuric acid. and 100 g. of crushed ice contained in a flask of about 500 ml. capacity fitted for stearn-distillation, taking care to leave behind any unchanged magnesium. [Pg.285]

Mix 200 g. of adipic acid intimately with 10 g. of finely-powdered, crystallised barium hydroxide. Place the mixture in a 1-litre distilling flask, fitted with a thermometer reaching to within 5 mm. of the bottom connect the flask with a condenser and receiver. Heat the mixture gradually in an air bath (1) to 285-295° during about 90 minutes and maintain it at this temperature mitil only a small amount of dry residue remains in the flask this requires a further 2 hours. The temperature must not be allowed to rise above 300°, since at this temperature the adipic acid distils quite rapidly the best working temperature is 290°. The cycZopentanone distils slowly accompanied by a little adipic acid. Separate the ketone from the water in the distillate, and dry it with anhydrous potassium carbonate this treatment simultaneously removes the traces of adipic acid present. Finally distil from a flask of suitable size and collect the cycZopentanone at 128-131°. The yield is 92 g. [Pg.340]

Immediately the reaction is complete, introduce through the condenser 250 ml. of 50 per cent, sulphuric acid (by weight) whilst cooling the mixture in ice and water and stirring vigorously. Transfer the mixture to a separatory funnel, remove the ether layer, and extract the aqueous layer with three 50 ml. portions of ether. Cool the combined ether extracts by the addition of ice, and add cautiously 100 ml. of 25 per cent, sodium hydroxide solution run off the aqueous layer and repeat the... [Pg.358]

Place 1 0 g. of the monobasic acid and 2 g. of aniline or p-toluidine in a dry test-tube, attach a short air condenser and heat the mixture in an oil bath at 140-160° for 2 hours do not reflux too vigorously an acid that boils below this temperature range and only allow steam to escape from the top of the condenser. For a sodium salt, use the proportions of 1 g. of salt to 1 5 g. of the base. If the acid is dibasic, employ double the quantity of amine and a reaction temperature of 180-200° incidentally, the procedure is recommended for dibasic acids since the latter frequently give anhydrides with thionyl chloride. Powder the cold reaction mixture, triturate it with 20-30 ml. of 10 per cent, hydrochloric acid, and recrystallise from dilute alcohol. [Pg.362]

Fit a 1500 ml. bolt-head flask with a reflux condenser and a thermometer. Place a solution of 125 g. of chloral hydrate in 225 ml. of warm water (50-60°) in the flask, add successively 77 g. of precipitated calcium carbonate, 1 ml. of amyl alcohol (to decrease the amount of frothing), and a solution of 5 g. of commercial sodium cyanide in 12 ml. of water. An exothermic reaction occurs. Heat the warm reaction mixture with a small flame so that it reaches 75° in about 10 minutes and then remove the flame. The temperature will continue to rise to 80-85° during 5-10 minutes and then falls at this point heat the mixture to boiling and reflux for 20 minutes. Cool the mixture in ice to 0-5°, acidify with 107-5 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid. Extract the acid with five 50 ml. portions of ether. Dry the combined ethereal extracts with 10 g. of anhydrous sodium or magnesium sulphate, remove the ether on a water bath, and distil the residue under reduced pressure using a Claiseii flask with fractionating side arm. Collect the dichloroacetic acid at 105-107°/26 mm. The yield is 85 g. [Pg.431]

Heat a mixture of 15 g. of p-nitroacetanilide and 75 ml. of 70 per cent, sulphuric acid (1) under a reflux water condenser for 20-30 minutes or until a test sample remains clear upon dilution with 2-3 times its volume of water. The p-nitroaniline is now present in the hquid as the sulphate. Pour the clear hot solution into 500 ml. of cold water and precipitate the p-nitroanihne by adding excess of 10 per cent, sodium hydroxide solution or of concentrated ammonia solution. When cold (cool the mixture in ice water, if necessary), filter the yellow crystalline precipitate at the pump, wash it well with water, and drain thoroughly. Recrystallise it from a mixture of equal volumes of rectified (or methylated) spirit and water or from hot water. Filter, wash and dry. The yield of p-nitroanihne, m.p, 148°, is 11 g. [Pg.581]

Cautiously add 250 g. (136 ml.) of concentrated sulphuric acid in a thin stream and with stirring to 400 ml. of water contained in a 1 litre bolt-head or three-necked flask, and then dissolve 150 g. of sodium nitrate in the diluted acid. Cool in a bath of ice or iced water. Melt 94 g. of phenol with 20 ml. of water, and add this from a separatory funnel to the stirred mixture in the flask at such a rate that the temperature does not rise above 20°. Continue the stirring for a further 2 hours after all the phenol has been added. Pour oflF the mother liquid from the resinous mixture of nitro compounds. Melt the residue with 500 ml. of water, shake and allow the contents of the flask to settle. Pour oflF the wash liquor and repeat the washing at least two or three times to ensure the complete removal of any residual acid. Steam distil the mixture (Fig. II, 40, 1 or Fig. II, 41, 1) until no more o-nitrophenol passes over if the latter tends to solidify in the condenser, turn oflF the cooling water temporarily. Collect the distillate in cold water, filter at the pump, and drain thoroughly. Dry upon filter paper in the air. The yield of o-nitrophenol, m.p. 46° (1), is 50 g. [Pg.677]

Preparation of benzyl cyanide. Place 100 g. of powdered, technical sodium cyanide (97-98 per cent. NaCN) (CAUTION) and 90 ml. of water in a 1 litre round-bottomed flask provided with a reflux condenser. Warm on a water bath until the sodium cyanide dissolves. Add, by means of a separatory funnel fitted into the top of the condenser with a grooved cork, a solution of 200 g. (181-5 ml.) of benzyl chloride (Section IV.22) in 200 g. of rectified spirit during 30-45 minutes. Heat the mixture in a water bath for 4 hours, cool, and filter off the precipitated sodium chloride with suction wash with a little alcohol. Distil off as much as possible of the alcohol on a water bath (wrap the flask in a cloth) (Fig. II, 13, 3). Cool the residual liquid, filter if necessary, and separate the layer of crude benzyl cyanide. (Sometimes it is advantageous to extract the nitrile with ether or benzene.) Dry over a little anhydrous magnesium sulphate, and distil under diminished pressure from a Claisen flask, preferably with a fractionating side arm (Figs. II, 24, 2-5). Collect the benzyl cyanide at 102-103°/10 mm. The yield is 160 g. [Pg.761]

Method 1. a-Naphthonitrile. Place 80 g. (54 ml.) of redistilled a-bromonaphthalene (Section IV.20), 43 g. of dry powdered cuprous cyanide (Section II,50,J) and 36 g. (37 ml.) of dry pure pyridine (1) (Section 11,47.22) in a 250 ml. round-bottomed flask fitted with a ground-in reflux condenser carrying a calcium chloride (or cotton wool) guard tube, and heat the mixture in a metal bath at 215-225° for... [Pg.764]

The hydrolysis by alkali is illustrated by the following experimental details for benzamido. Place 3 g. of benzamide and 50 ml. of 10 per cent, sodium hydroxide solution in a 150 ml. conical or round-bottomed flask equipped with a reflux condenser. Boil the mixture gently for 30 minutes ammonia is freely evolved. Detach the condenser and continue the boiling in the open flask for 3-4 minutes to expel the residual ammonia. Cool the solution in ice, and add concentrated hydrochloric acid until the mixture is strongly acidic benzoic acid separates immediately. Leave the mixture in ice until cold, filter at the pump, wash with a little cold water and drain well. RecrystaUise the benzoic acid from hot water. Determine the m.p., and confirm its identity by a mixed m.p. test. [Pg.799]

Method 2. Place 90 g. of sodium benzenesulphonate (Section IV,29) (previously dried at 130-140° for 3 hours) and 50 g. of powdered phosphorus pentachloride (1) in a 500 ml. round-bottomed flask furnished with a reflux condenser heat the mixture in an oil bath at 170-180° for 12-15 hours. Every 3 hours remove the flask from the oil bath, allow to cool for 15-20 minutes, stopper and shake thoroughly until the mass becomes pasty. At the end of the heating period, allow the reaction mixture to cool. Pour on to 1 kilo of crushed ice. Extract the crude benzenesulphonyl chloride with 150 ml. of carbon tetrachloride and the aqueous layer with 75 ml. of the same solvent. Remove the solvent under atmospheric pressure and proceed as in Method 1. The yield is about 170 g., but depends upon the purity of the original sodium benzenesulphonate. [Pg.822]

Mix intimately in a mortar 100 g. of sodium laevulinate, 250 g. of phosphorus sulphide (1) and 50 g. of clean dry sand. Place the mixture in a flask fitted with a condenser for distillation and a receiver (2). Heat the flask with a free flame until the reaction commences, and then remove the flame. When the reaction subsides, continue the heating until distillation ceases. Wash the distillate with 10 per cent, sodium hydroxide solution to remove acidic by-products and steam distil. Separate the crude 2-methyltliiophene from the steam distillate, dry over anhydrous calcium sulphate, and distil from a little sodium. Collect the pure compound at 113° the yield is 30 g. [Pg.836]

In a 250 ml. conical flask, fitted with an air condenser of wide bore, place 50 g. (51 -5 ml.) of acetonylacetone (see Section V,9, Note 2) and 100 g. of ammonium carbonate (lump form). Heat the mixture in an oil bath at 100° until effervescence stops (60-90 minutes) some ammonium carbonate (or carbamate) sublimes into the condenser and this must be pushed back into the reaction mixture by means of a stout glass rod. Replace the air condenser by a Liebig s condenser with wide bore inner tube and reflux the mixture gently (bath temperature, 115°) for a further 30 minutes dissolve the solid which has sublimed into the condenser in about 5 ml. of hot water and return the solution to the reaction mixture. [Pg.838]


See other pages where Mixtures in condensation is mentioned: [Pg.53]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.1986]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.1986]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.470]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.250]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.250]    [Pg.312]    [Pg.415]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.466]    [Pg.511]    [Pg.603]    [Pg.605]    [Pg.703]    [Pg.712]    [Pg.770]    [Pg.781]    [Pg.808]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.13 , Pg.14 , Pg.14 , Pg.36 , Pg.1445 ]




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Mixtures condensation

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