3. Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) - All submissions
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Item Study of the selectivity to light hydrocarbons in Fischer-Tropsch synthesis(2016) Muleja, Adolph AngaMany reports in the open literature have focused on Fischer-Tropsch (FT) kinetics, yet none of them appear to be able to explain FTS completely. Few of the FT models consider the production of olefins and paraffins separately. To study whether the selectivity to olefins and paraffins follows similar trends and if kinetics alone suffices to explain FT phenomena, a series of FT experiments were conducted in a fixed bed reactor loaded with 10% Co/TiO2. FT feeds were periodically switched from syngas to syngas + N2 by adjusting the total reactor pressure so that the reactant partial pressures (PCO and PH2) remained constant. During the initial deactivation (the first 1200 hours), it was found that the formation rates of olefins remained fairly constant (in some cases they increased) while those of paraffins decreased. This indicates the deactivation is mainly caused by the decrease in the paraffin formation rate. Currently, none of the published kinetic models can explain the phenomenon that the decay of the reaction rates of olefins and paraffins were not the same during the deactivation. At steady state (1055 to 2700 hours, overall reaction rate fairly constant), adding extra N2 decreased the selectivity to the light hydrocarbons. These results suggest that by feeding the extra N2 there could be an increase in selectivity and formation rates to long chain hydrocarbons (C5+). Plotting molar ratios of paraffin to olefin (P/O) with carbon number n+1 versus the ratio with carbon number n revealed linear relationships which are independent of feed gases, catalyst activity and reaction temperature. These results imply that product distributions might be determined by some sort of equilibrium. Another plot of normalised mole fractions of CnH2n, Cn+1H2n+2, and CnH2n+2 in ternary diagrams showed that after disturbances these product distributions tended to stable points. It is suggested that this could be due to slow changes in the liquid composition after the disturbances. Although not all the results are explained, the researcher emphasises that normal kinetics alone cannot explain these results completely. There might be factors, iii including vapour-liquid equilibrium or reactive distillation, which are worthy of consideration to explain FTS.Item Alternatives to distillation: multi-membrane permeation and petrol pre-blending for bio-ethanol recovery(2016) Stacey, Neil ThomasSeparation of materials is crucial to the operation of the majority of chemical processes, not only for the purification of final products but also for the processing of feed-stocks prior to chemical reaction. The most commonplace method of materials separation is distillation which, unfortunately, is often an energy-intensive process and contributes significantly to mankind’s energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions. Alternative approaches to separation are therefore a crucial element of the ongoing pursuit for sustainability in chemical industries. There are two principal ways of going about this. The first is to replace distillation units with alternative unit operations that can achieve the same separation with less energy expenditure. The second approach is overall flowsheet revision, fundamentally changing a separation cycle to minimize its energy requirements. The greatest improvements to energy efficiency will be achieved by applying both approaches in tandem. However, each must be developed separately to make that possible. This thesis lays the groundwork for radical revision of major separation operations by showcasing a new overall flowsheet for bioethanol separation that promises tremendous improvements in separation efficiency, reducing the energy usage involved in ethanol purification by as much as 40% in some scenarios. It also develops a novel method for the design of multi-membrane permeation units, showing how area ratio can be manipulated to fundamentally alter separation performance from such units, resulting in superior separation performance to conventional units, achieving higher recoveries than conventional setups. With membranes being an increasingly popular separation method, the potential for superior performance from multi-membrane units promises improvements in separation efficiency.Item Distillation synthesis toolbox for pre-flowsheet design(2007-02-15T10:46:26Z) Wilson, Cameron JosephPreliminary evaluations during flowsheet synthesis require simple effective tools for comparison and elimination of process alternatives. This work investigates three areas of interest in distillation. Column profile map theory has simplified complex column investigations. The predictions of the difference point equation at finite reflux were experimentally verified for the acetone, methanol and ethanol system in a continuous column apparatus. Residue curve analysis is usually limited to systems with four components for distillation system analysis. An alternative representation, based on combinatorial topology and temperature sequencing, is introduced for use in high level synthesis decisions for higher component order systems. Attainable region (AR) theory is applied to an ideal binary distillation system for a geometrically based method of cost analysis. A constrained attainable region is constructed from a series of equilibrium step compositions with varying reflux and corresponding cost associations. The AR is shown to be useful for costing and optimization.