Pepijn76
Chemical
- Feb 11, 2010
- 12
For a client I'm designing a condensor (chiller) in a vapour treatment unit (adsorption by active carbon)which removes benzene from an air stream. The active carbon is regenerated with steam.
The steam with desolved benzene is condensed in a condensor and catched up in a atmospheric vessel. The vapour that is formed in the vessel is mixed with air (dosed by an handvalve) in order to keep the vessel at atmospheric pressure. The vapour is sucked out of the vessel (by a blower) to the mentioned chiller which removes the last bits of benzene and water out of the airstream. I simulated this regenerationsystem in ASPEN HYSYS.
I discovered that the higher the amount of suppleted air (with the same amount of benzene and water -> lower concentration) the less benzene and water can be condensed in this chiller (fixed outlet temperature of air). I cannot explain this phenomenon? Can someone give me the clue?
The steam with desolved benzene is condensed in a condensor and catched up in a atmospheric vessel. The vapour that is formed in the vessel is mixed with air (dosed by an handvalve) in order to keep the vessel at atmospheric pressure. The vapour is sucked out of the vessel (by a blower) to the mentioned chiller which removes the last bits of benzene and water out of the airstream. I simulated this regenerationsystem in ASPEN HYSYS.
I discovered that the higher the amount of suppleted air (with the same amount of benzene and water -> lower concentration) the less benzene and water can be condensed in this chiller (fixed outlet temperature of air). I cannot explain this phenomenon? Can someone give me the clue?