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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Factors affecting the extraction efficiency of an experimental, liquid-liquid, sieve-plate, pulse extractor

McEachern, Robert Monte January 1958 (has links)
It was the purpose of this investigation, using the ternary system acetone-toluene-water in the extraction of acetone from toluene using distilled water, to determine the operating characteristics of a pulse extraction column, and to determine the effects of solvent-to-feed ratio, feed concentration, and pulse amplitude on the overall mass transfer coefficient. The equipment used was operated at a temperature of 25±1 ºC, and consisted of a two-inch diameter glass column with eight sieve plates having 1/16-inch diameter holes on triangular centers, and a plate-free area of twenty-three per cent. The plate spacing used was eight inches. Pulsation of the liquids in the column was accomplished by means of a brass bellows actuated by a push rod driven by a motor-driven cam. The determination of the column operating characteristics resulted in curves defining the operating flow rates at which the column could be operated without light- or heavy-phase flooding. The shape of the curves was a function of the feed and solvent flow rates, but was independent of the pulse amplitude. Using flow rates taken from the column operating characteristic curves, a total or forty-five tests were made to determine the effect or pulse amplitude, feed concentration, and the solvent-to-feed ratio on the overall mass transfer coefficient. It was found that the overall mass transfer coefficient was the highest at a volumetric solvent-to-feed ratio of 0.50 for conditions of blowing, reached a minimum at a volumetric solvent-to-reed ratio of 1.00 at which there was no blowing or dumping, and increased slightly at a volumetric solvent-to-feed ratio or 1.50 at which dumping occurred. The overall mass transfer coefficient increased with increased feed concentration in a straight-line relationship. The overall mass transfer coefficient was also increased by an increase in the pulse amplitude. / Master of Science

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