pbrod
Industrial
- Nov 4, 2009
- 33
Dear all,
We have a stripping colum for stripping alcohol and water out of phthalates. It's a two section column with a steam ejector (500kg/u) between the two sections to reach a vacuum of 10mbara in the bottom and a serie of three steam ejectors using 8bar steam care for the vacuum. The top condensor is a lammela heat exchanger using 15°C water (can go up to 20°C). In the input is preheated to about 130°C and is fed in the top of the stripping column.
The problems.
We encounter pulsating vacum with a 150-200mbar amplitude on the colum. And when the vacuum reaches the 200mbara then it can be suddenly broken.
The strange thing is that the vacuum comes back faster when it pulsates than when it is buildup from start.
I know this is a very broad question but I hope that someone can give a good hint to solve the problem.
We already did some tests and found some minor leaks, If ok I won't post this information just to keep everything open.
We have a stripping colum for stripping alcohol and water out of phthalates. It's a two section column with a steam ejector (500kg/u) between the two sections to reach a vacuum of 10mbara in the bottom and a serie of three steam ejectors using 8bar steam care for the vacuum. The top condensor is a lammela heat exchanger using 15°C water (can go up to 20°C). In the input is preheated to about 130°C and is fed in the top of the stripping column.
The problems.
We encounter pulsating vacum with a 150-200mbar amplitude on the colum. And when the vacuum reaches the 200mbara then it can be suddenly broken.
The strange thing is that the vacuum comes back faster when it pulsates than when it is buildup from start.
I know this is a very broad question but I hope that someone can give a good hint to solve the problem.
We already did some tests and found some minor leaks, If ok I won't post this information just to keep everything open.