Table: Uses of Different Products From Vacuum Column
Table: Uses of Different Products From Vacuum Column
Table: Uses of Different Products From Vacuum Column
• The vapours and steam rise in the column and products are withdrawn at different
sections. Circulating refluxes are also introduced at different sections of the column to
balance the liquid and vapour loads in the column.
• Overhead vapours are condensed by pre- and after condensers of ejector system.
Products are cooled and sent to storage tanks.
• If vacuum residue is left to remain at high temperature, coke formation may start due
to cracking. The vacuum column bottom product is quenched by adding a part of cold
vacuum residue in column, to avoid cracking of vacuum residue at high temperature
at bottom of the column.
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• Top temperature of column is usually dew point temperature of over head vapours at
operating pressure.
Column Pressure
• Normally pressure is not an operating variable. Higher pressure means higher
temperature requirement for vaporization.
• For residue stock distillation, even atmospheric pressure may be high considering
the temperature requirement for distillation and thermal stability of stock. So,
vacuum distillation is done.
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• The column diameter can lower at higher pressure due to higher vapour density.
Flow rates
• Feed to distillation column is determined by production demand placed on the plant
and by capacity of distillation equipments.
• Flow rates of overhead and bottom products from a column are determined by feed
composition and degree of separation which is a function of reflux rates.
Reflux
• Firstly, it provides liquid in the rectifying section to cause vapour-liquid contact
resulting in fractionation.
• Higher reflux ratio results in better separation between light and heavy fraction but
requires higher condenser and reboiler loads (loss of energy).
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• When the liquid or vapour rate inside the column becomes too low or too high, the
contact is insufficient and poor separation results.
• Pulsation: When amount of vapour passing through a tray is so small that bubble
cap pass vapour intermittently.
• Dumping: This results at relatively high liquid loads when some of the upstream
bubble caps do not pass vapour.
• Coning: This takes place when the combination of weir height and liquid crest over
weir does not adequately seal the cap slots. If the slots are not sealed properly,
vapours can pass to the tray without contacting liquid on the tray.
• Blowing: This results when amount of vapours passing through bubble caps is so
large that it literally tears holes in liquid on the tray.
• Entrainment: A relatively fine mist is carried away to the tray above by superficial
vapour velocity. Otherwise large droplets of liquid are jetted from one tray to the
next.
•
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• Flooding: This occurs when the level of liquid-foam mixture in the downpipe builds
up and over flows to the tray above.
• For efficient operation, the feed to a column should be admitted at correct point
according to composition.
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