Distillation
Distillation is a method of
separation of
substances based on differences in their
volatilities.
Known since
antiquity, the
concentration of
alcohol by the application of
heat to a
fermented liquid solution is perhaps the oldest form of distillation, in the course of producing
distilled beverages. However, the technique is now widely used for a variety of liquids in the
chemical industry and in the production of
petroleum products, among other fields.
The liquid solution
evaporates, such that the
vapor has a composition determined by the chemical properties of the solution. In distillation, the mixture is boiled to effect sufficient evaporation. Distillation of a given component is possible if the vapor has a higher proportion of the given component than the solution. This is another way of saying that one component has a higher volatility, due to a higher vapor pressure in the operating temperature. Although a higher vapor pressure correlates with a lower boiling point, it is important to note that distillation
does not use the different boiling points of pure components. Most mixtures are nonideal: they boil at different temperatures from their components, and significant evaporation takes place around the boiling point, not just at it. It is more accurate to say that given a boiling mixture, its
composition is more important in predicting the separation efficiency than the
boiling point of a free individual component.
Interactions between the components of the solution create properties unique to the solution, as most processes entail nonideal mixtures, where
Raoult's law does not hold. Such interactions can result in an
azeotrope. At an azeotrope, the solution contains the given component in the same proportion as the vapor, so that evaporation does not change the purity, and distillation does not effect separation. For example,
ethyl alcohol and
water form an azeotrope of 95% at 78.2°C.
By the nature of the process, it is theoretically impossible to completely purify the components using distillation, as distillation only tends to approach purity, never reaching it. This is comparable to dilution, which never reaches purity. If ultra-pure products are the goal, then further chemical separation must be used.
The minimum in distillation is
flash evaporation, where either the temperature is rapidly increased or pressure reduced, and vapor and liquid fractions are thus obtained, which may be processed as such.
The device used in distillation is referred to as a
still and consists at a minimum of a
reboiler or
pot in which the source material is heated, a
condenser in which the heated is cooled back to the liquid
state, and a
receiver in which the concentrated or purified liquid is collected.
The equipment may effect separation by one of two main methods. Firstly the vapors given off by the heated solution may consist of two liquids with significantly different boiling points. Thus, the vapor that is given off is in the vast majority of one or the other liquid, which after
condensation and collection effects the separation.
The second method (
fractional distillation) is more effective at separating liquids with similar boiling points. The most widely used industrial applications of continuous, steady-state fractional distillation are in
petroleum refineries,
petrochemical plants and
natural gas processing plants.
|
Typical distillation towers in oil refineries |
Industrial distillation
is typically performed in large, vertical cylindrical columns known as
distillation towers or
distillation columns with diameters ranging from about 65 centimeters to 6 meters and heights ranging from about 6 meters to 60 meters or more. When the process feed has a diverse composition, as in distilling
crude oil, liquid outlets at intervals up the column allow for the withdrawal of different
fractions or products having different
boiling points or boiling ranges. The "lightest" products (those with the lowest boiling point) exit from the top of the columns and the "heaviest" products (those with the highest boiling point) exit from the bottom of the column. Large-scale industrial towers also use
reflux to achieve a more complete separation of products.
Design and operation of a distillation column depends on the feed and desired products. Given a simple, binary component feed, analytical methods such as the McCabe-Thiele method
can be used. For a multi-component feed, simulation models are used both for design and operation. Moreover, the efficiencies of the vapor-liquid contact devices (referred to as "plates") used in distillation columns are typically lower than that of a theoretical 100% efficient equilibrium stage. Hence, a distillation column needs more plates than the number of theoretical vapor-liquid equilibrium stages.
Distillation was developed into its modern form with the invention of the alembic by Persian alchemist Jabir ibn Hayyan c. 800; he is also credited with the invention of numerous other chemical apparatus and processes that are still in use today. [[Image:Simple_chem_distillation.PNG|frame|right|Diagram of simple distillation set-up without a fractionating column often used by chemists. Shown in use.
1. heat source (a Bunsen burner here)
2. distilling flask (a round bottom flask)
3. distilling head
4. thermometer
5. condenser
6. cooling water in
7. cooling water out
8. receiving flask collecting dripping distillate
9. vacuum source
10. vacuum adapter]]Chemists often use distillation in their work as a means of separating compounds or components. See at right a diagram of a simple distillation set-up without a fractionating column often used by chemists. A distillation apparatus sometimes used by chemists is a rotary evaporator to distill (or evaporate) away solvent from a solution.
An analogous method with freezing instead of evaporation is called freeze distillation. It is not distillation, and does not produce products equivalent to distillation.*George Washington
*Sam Adams *American Whiskey Trail
*Azeotrope
*Pervaporation
*Distilled beverage
*Distillation Types
**Azeotropic Distillation
**Dry distillation
**Flash evaporation
**Extractive Distillation
**Fractional distillation
**Vacuum distillation
**Steam Distillation
**Reactive distillation
**Freeze distillation*Extractive Distillation
*Alcohol distillation
*Homedistiller.org - The mother of all home distilling information websites
*Alcohol Wiki at Homedistiller.org
*Essential and Fragrance Oils Distillation