2018 Spring Meeting and 14th Global Congress on Process Safety
(164b) Adsorption: The Forgotten Unit Operation
Authors
Removing benzene by distillation generally produces a large benzene-rich by-product stream and a product stream containing low parts per million benzene. Thus, removing parts per million benzene from a product stream is expensive.
Removing benzene via adsorption produces a product stream at or below one part per million benzene without producing a large benzene-rich by-product stream. Adsorbed benzene is recovered by heating the adsorbent, volatizing the benzene-rich hydrocarbon, then condensing the resulting vapor. The benzene-rich hydrocarbon can be sold for fuel or consumed as fuel at the site.
Unfortunately, due to its molecular structure, benzene does not adsorb onto activated alumina or activated carbon. Benzene must, therefore, be adsorbed onto a size exclusion adsorbent, such as molecular sieve.
This presentation discusses using 10X and 13X molecular sieve to adsorb benzene from 1-hexene. We present the benzene adsorption isotherms for each molecular sieve and discuss their implications.