Hi all,
We have a small (3m) packed column used to purify a chemical. The standard process takes a forecut near total reflux to remove light impurities, then we increase the collection rate to collect the heart after most of the impurities are removed.
I have implemented a one-time change to the hearts collection rate for a single batch, increasing it to reduce cycle-time of the batch. The batch is analyzed, and it passes our quality criteria easily.
However, when subsequent batches are run with the same raw material with the standard procedure with less product takeoff, the next 2-3 batches fail for high impurities of a particular component.
Why would the separation be worse in subsequent batches? The only thing I can think of would be the column packing getting dried out with less reflux coming down the column and it takes a few "normal" runs for the packing to previous wettability. It could be that the change has nothing to do with what we're seeing, but this is two times now that changing one run has affected a few subsequent batches... I'm stumped.
Any ideas?
We have a small (3m) packed column used to purify a chemical. The standard process takes a forecut near total reflux to remove light impurities, then we increase the collection rate to collect the heart after most of the impurities are removed.
I have implemented a one-time change to the hearts collection rate for a single batch, increasing it to reduce cycle-time of the batch. The batch is analyzed, and it passes our quality criteria easily.
However, when subsequent batches are run with the same raw material with the standard procedure with less product takeoff, the next 2-3 batches fail for high impurities of a particular component.
Why would the separation be worse in subsequent batches? The only thing I can think of would be the column packing getting dried out with less reflux coming down the column and it takes a few "normal" runs for the packing to previous wettability. It could be that the change has nothing to do with what we're seeing, but this is two times now that changing one run has affected a few subsequent batches... I'm stumped.
Any ideas?