Adsorption: Ion Exchange Is A Similar Process However, in This Case Ions Create Complexes With The Solid
Adsorption: Ion Exchange Is A Similar Process However, in This Case Ions Create Complexes With The Solid
A component can be separated from a mixture if it selectively adsorbs onto a solid surface. This
is the basis of the adsorption unit process. Adsorbents are usually porous solids, and adsorption
occurs mainly on the pore walls "inside" particles. Examples of adsorbents include:
Ideally, one would be able to construct a continuous countercurrent system, but moving solids is
tricky. Instead, most commercial applications use small particles of adsorbent in a fixed bed.
Fluid passes down through the bed (down instead of up to avoid fluidization) and components
adsorb onto the solid. The steps can be summarized:
1. solute diffuses through the fluid to an area near the solid particle surface
2. solute diffuses into the pores of the particle
3. solute diffuses to the pore wall
4. solute adsorbs to the pore wall surface
Ion exchange is a similar process; however, in this case ions create complexes with the solid
instead of adsorbing.
When a bed nears saturation, the flow is stopped and the bed is regenerated to cause desorption.
The adsorbate can thus be recovered and the adsorbent reused. Regeneration can be
accomplished in several ways, and these lead to the "cycle type":
Temperature swing
Pressure swing
Inert/Purge stripping
Displacement Purge
Temperature swing is usually the slowest of these (since the bed has to heat/cool before reuse).
Adsorption Equilibrium
Several fits have been proposed for isotherms. A linear isotherm seems to work for very dilute
solutions, but not for many others. The Freundlich isotherm describes physical adsorption from
liquids and can also be used for the adsorption of hydrocarbon gases on activated carbon. It is a
two parameter model, of the form
which assumes that the number of adsorption sites is fixed and that adsorption is reversible.
Breakthrough Curves
Adsorption is a transient process. The amount of material adsorbed within a bed depends both on
position and time. Consider the time dependence. As fluid enters the bed, it comes in contact
with the first few layers of absorbent. Solute adsorbs, filling up some of the available sites. Soon,
the adsorbent near the entrance is saturated and the fluid penetrates farther into the bed before all
solute is removed. Thus the active region shifts down through the bed as time goes on.