Removal And Recovery Of Organic Vapor Emissions By Fixed Bed Activated Carbon Fiber Adsorber Cryogenic Condenser PDF Download

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Removal and Recovery of Organic Vapor Emissions by Fixed-Bed Activated Carbon Fiber Adsorber-Cryogenic Condenser

Removal and Recovery of Organic Vapor Emissions by Fixed-Bed Activated Carbon Fiber Adsorber-Cryogenic Condenser
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 65
Release: 1998
Genre:
ISBN:

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Abatement of toxic volatile organic compounds (TVOCs) emitted to the atmosphere has become a concern because of the magnitude of the emissions and their potential health effects to humans and deleterious effects to the environment. New control technologies are being developed to separate and remove those toxic compounds from gas streams for reuse of the TVOCs in the process that generated them. This project evaluated the ability of an activated carbon fiber cloth (ACFC) adsorption, electrothermal desorption, cryogenic-condensation system to remove 10 cu cm/min containing 1000 ppmv of methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) or toluene from air streams that are dry or at 90 percent relative humidity. Results indicate that MEK and toluene are readily adsorbed from the carrier gas streams with the ACFC adsorber. Electrothermal desorption is also effective at desorbing the TVOCs and water from the ACFC. Cryogenic condensation is also effective for the dry MEK and toluene desorption conditions. Economic analysis shows that capitol costs for a conventional thermal swing GAC adsorption system will be 1.7 times greater than this system for the toluene dry air stream. The MEK recovery credit will be approximately four times greater than the annual operating costs for the MEK dry air stream.


Removal and Recovery of Organic Vapor Emissions by Fixed-Bed Activated Carbon Fiber Adsorber-Cryogenic Condenser

Removal and Recovery of Organic Vapor Emissions by Fixed-Bed Activated Carbon Fiber Adsorber-Cryogenic Condenser
Author: K. James Hay
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1998
Genre: Air quality management
ISBN:

Download Removal and Recovery of Organic Vapor Emissions by Fixed-Bed Activated Carbon Fiber Adsorber-Cryogenic Condenser Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Abatement of toxic volatile organic compounds (TVOCs) emitted to the atmosphere has become a concern because of the magnitude of the emissions and their potential health effects to humans and deleterious effects to the environment. New control technologies are being developed to separate and remove those toxic compounds from gas streams for reuse of the TVOCs in the process that generated them. This project evaluated the ability of an activated carbon fiber cloth (ACFC) adsorption, electrothermal desorption, cryogenic-condensation system to remove 10 cu cm/min containing 1000 ppmv of methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) or toluene from air streams that are dry or at 90 percent relative humidity. Results indicate that MEK and toluene are readily adsorbed from the carrier gas streams with the ACFC adsorber. Electrothermal desorption is also effective at desorbing the TVOCs and water from the ACFC. Cryogenic condensation is also effective for the dry MEK and toluene desorption conditions. Economic analysis shows that capitol costs for a conventional thermal swing GAC adsorption system will be 1.7 times greater than this system for the toluene dry air stream. The MEK recovery credit will be approximately four times greater than the annual operating costs for the MEK dry air stream.


Removal and Recovery of Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK) Vapor Emissions by Carbon Fiber Adsorber-Cryogenic Condenser

Removal and Recovery of Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK) Vapor Emissions by Carbon Fiber Adsorber-Cryogenic Condenser
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 39
Release: 1999
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 mandate the reduction of emissions of hazardous air pollutants (HAP). Activated carbon fiber-cloth (ACFC) offers promise as a superior adsorbent to remove and recover organic HAP from gas streams. This study designed, built, and tested a second-generation system with an improved adsorber using methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) as the organic pollutant. Total flow rate of the bench-scale system was 5 Lpm with the gas stream containing 1000 ppmv MEK. Breakthrough times ranged between 11.9 and 12.9 hr. Throughput ratios of 86.9 percent were achieved. Electrothermal regeneration times were approximately 1 hr at 100W. It was shown that increasing the adsorption bed's dry-bulb temperature by 10 degrees C can cut adverse effects of treating high humidity gas streams in half. The system was automated to demonstrate continuous MEK adsorption, desorption, condensation, and recovery. Overall removal efficiency during continuous operation was 99.9 percent by mass. The study's preliminary design and cost analysis for a pilot-scale system estimates a cost of $60,000 for a flow rate of 0.5 m3/min and a concentration of 1000 ppmv. An economic analysis of a proposed full-scale system shows that a process recovery cost of $2/kg of MEK is achievable.


Volatile Organic Compound Recovery Using Activated-Carbon Fiber-Cloth with Rapid Electrothermal Desorption

Volatile Organic Compound Recovery Using Activated-Carbon Fiber-Cloth with Rapid Electrothermal Desorption
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 14
Release: 1999
Genre:
ISBN:

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Activated-carbon fiber-cloth (ACFC) has been investigated as an alternative adsorbent to remove volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) from gas streams when compared to conventional granular activated carbons (GACs). ACFC has up to twice the adsorption capacity of GAC and is more suited to electrothermal regeneration.