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Kirkbride Equation

The document discusses the Kirkbride equation, an empirical method for estimating the number of stages in a distillation column's rectifying and stripping sections without requiring an estimate of the feed point temperature. The Kirkbride equation uses the molar flows of the bottom and top products as well as the concentrations of the heavy and light keys in the feed and products to calculate the number of stages above and below the feed point.

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Tayyeb Nauman
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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
2K views

Kirkbride Equation

The document discusses the Kirkbride equation, an empirical method for estimating the number of stages in a distillation column's rectifying and stripping sections without requiring an estimate of the feed point temperature. The Kirkbride equation uses the molar flows of the bottom and top products as well as the concentrations of the heavy and light keys in the feed and products to calculate the number of stages above and below the feed point.

Uploaded by

Tayyeb Nauman
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Kirkbride Equation:A limitation of the Erbar-Maddox and similar empirical methods is that they do not

give the feed-point location. An estimate can be made by using the Fenske equation
to calculate the number of stages in the rectifying and stripping sections separately,
but this requires an estimate of the feed-point temperature. An alternative approach
is to use the empirical equation given by Kirkbride (1944):

Where,
Nr = number of stages above the feed, including any partial condenser;
Ns = number of stages below the feed, including the reboiler;
B= molar flow bottom product;
D= molar flow top product;
xf,HK = concentration of the heavy key in the feed;
xf,LK = concentration of the light key in the feed;
xd,HK = concentration of the heavy key in the top product;
xb,LK = concentration of the light key if in the bottom product.

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