bendhoward
Mechanical
- Aug 10, 2009
- 4
I would just like to preface this by saying that heat and mass transfer is far from my area of expertise, so I apologize if this post is too elementary. That being said, any suggestions regarding design or even just potentially useful reading material would be greatly appreciated.
What I have is a mist of 100% ethanol droplets (around 1 - 4 microns diameter) in a relatively slow moving air stream (less than 10 LPM at STP in a 1" tube). My goal is to remove a large potion of the ethanol from the stream using a system of a heater and cooler.
The heater brings the stream temperature to 150 C, successfully evaporating the droplets, and then the cooler brings it down to 4 C. The issue I'm having is that instead of condensing on the side of the copper pipe in the cooler, the vapor re-forms droplets entrained in the air stream that exit as mist, thus preventing the capture of the ethanol.
Aspects of the system I can change easily are the ratio of ethanol droplets to air volume, air flow rate, and temperatures of the heater and cooler. A bit more difficult but still possible are copper tube diameter and length.
Thanks in advance for your help.
-Ben
What I have is a mist of 100% ethanol droplets (around 1 - 4 microns diameter) in a relatively slow moving air stream (less than 10 LPM at STP in a 1" tube). My goal is to remove a large potion of the ethanol from the stream using a system of a heater and cooler.
The heater brings the stream temperature to 150 C, successfully evaporating the droplets, and then the cooler brings it down to 4 C. The issue I'm having is that instead of condensing on the side of the copper pipe in the cooler, the vapor re-forms droplets entrained in the air stream that exit as mist, thus preventing the capture of the ethanol.
Aspects of the system I can change easily are the ratio of ethanol droplets to air volume, air flow rate, and temperatures of the heater and cooler. A bit more difficult but still possible are copper tube diameter and length.
Thanks in advance for your help.
-Ben