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Triangular diagrams saturated extract

Find the saturated extract, saturated raffinate, and conjugate lines on a right-triangular diagram. [Pg.425]

Extraction systems are noted for the wide variety of equilibrium behavior that can occur in them. The most common type of system behavior is shown in Figure 7.2, often called a type I system, since there is one pair of immiscible binary compounds. The triangular coordinates are used as isotherms, or diagrams at constant temperature. Liquid C dissolves completely in A and B, but A and B dissolve only to a limited extent in each other, to give rise to the saturated liquid solutions at L (A-rich) and at K (B-rich). A binary mixture J anywhere between L and K will separate into two insoluble liquid phases of compositions at L and K. The relative amounts of the phases depends upon the position of J, according to the principle of equation (7-1). A typical example of a system exhibiting type I behavior is water (A)-chloroform (B)-ace-tone (C). [Pg.426]


See other pages where Triangular diagrams saturated extract is mentioned: [Pg.320]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.429]    [Pg.532]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.550]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.550]    [Pg.550]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.524 ]




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