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Effect of surfactants on liquid-side mass transfer coefficients in gas-liquid systems: A first step to modeling
Authors:Rodolphe Sardeing
Affiliation:Laboratoire d’Ingénierie des Procédés pour l’Environnement, Département Génie des Procédés et de l’Environnement, Institut National des Sciences Appliquées, 135 Avenue de Rangueil, 31077 Toulouse Cedex 4, France
Abstract:This paper focuses on the effect of surfactants on the mass transfer parameters (volumetric mass transfer coefficient kLa and liquid-side mass transfer coefficient kL). Tap water and aqueous solutions with surfactants (anionic, cationic and non-ionic at concentrations up to View the MathML source are used as liquid phases. The bubbles are generated into a small-scale bubble column having an elastic membrane with a single orifice as gas sparger. To understand the effects of the surfactants on the mass transfer, not only the static surface tension is used, but also the characteristic adsorption parameters like the surface coverage ratio at equilibrium Se. The liquid-side mass transfer coefficient is obtained from the ratio of the volumetric mass transfer coefficient (measured by a chemical method) and the specific interfacial area. These two parameters are obtained simultaneously. The methods used to obtain these parameters are described in Painmanakul et al. [2005. Effects of surfactants on liquid-side mass transfer coefficients. Chemical Engineering Science 60, 6480-6491].Whatever the liquid phase, three zones are found on the liquid-side mass transfer coefficient variation with the bubble diameter. For bubble diameters less than 1.5 mm, whatever the liquid phases, the kL values are roughly constant at View the MathML source. For bubble diameters greater than 3.5 mm, the kL values do not vary much with the bubble diameter, but depend on the surfactant concentration. For bubble diameters between 1.5 and 3.5 mm, the kL values increase from View the MathML source to the value reached at 3.5 mm. This increase depends on the surfactants. Higbie's model does not represent the kL values for bubble diameters greater than 3.5 mm, even though there is a small amount of surfactant in the liquid phase. Thus, a model is proposed for each zone described above. Explanations are also proposed for the effect of the surfactant on the kL values for each of the above zones.
Keywords:Bubble   Hydrodynamics   Mass transfer   Surfactant   Liquid-side mass transfer coefficient   Modeling
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