GB2035118A - Separation of immiscible liquids - Google Patents

Separation of immiscible liquids Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2035118A
GB2035118A GB7940588A GB7940588A GB2035118A GB 2035118 A GB2035118 A GB 2035118A GB 7940588 A GB7940588 A GB 7940588A GB 7940588 A GB7940588 A GB 7940588A GB 2035118 A GB2035118 A GB 2035118A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
separation means
component
fluid
denser
main chamber
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB7940588A
Other versions
GB2035118B (en
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Fram Europe Ltd
Original Assignee
Fram Europe Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Fram Europe Ltd filed Critical Fram Europe Ltd
Priority to GB7940588A priority Critical patent/GB2035118B/en
Publication of GB2035118A publication Critical patent/GB2035118A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2035118B publication Critical patent/GB2035118B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D17/00Separation of liquids, not provided for elsewhere, e.g. by thermal diffusion
    • B01D17/02Separation of non-miscible liquids
    • B01D17/0208Separation of non-miscible liquids by sedimentation
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D17/00Separation of liquids, not provided for elsewhere, e.g. by thermal diffusion
    • B01D17/02Separation of non-miscible liquids
    • B01D17/0208Separation of non-miscible liquids by sedimentation
    • B01D17/0211Separation of non-miscible liquids by sedimentation with baffles

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Separating Particles In Gases By Inertia (AREA)

Abstract

Liquids such as oil and water are separated by gravity in a generally cylindrical pressure vessel having a main chamber with a secondary chamber at one axial end thereof, and being provided with a first outlet 7 for the less dense liquid exiting from the main chamber and a second outlet 9 for the denser liquid exiting from the secondary chamber. A separation means in the form of a rectangular stack of corrugated plates is mounted in the main chamber and provides tortuous passages from the main chamber to the secondary chamber. The inlet 3 for the liquid mixture divides into two branches extending between the vessel wall and the plate stack, so that incoming liquids reach the left hand (inlet) end of the stack only after flowing back along the length of the vessel, which enhances the separation process. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Separation This invention relates to the separation of a suspension of two generally immiscible fluid components. More particularly, but not necessarily exclusively, it is concerned with the separation of oil from water.
The separation of immiscible fluid components, such as oil and water is of substantial economic importance in many industries. Installations for achieving a passable degree of such separation represent an important capital expense in such industries and the installations themselves may be of substantial size. A typical installation might employ a cylindrical pressure vessel with a diameter in the region of one metre and an axial length of some 3 metres arranged horizontally, the tank having a collector vessel attached thereto, the overal vertical dimensions of the installation being in the region of 2 metres. The pressure vessel of a typical such prior proposed separation apparatus is divided into a main chamber and a secondary chamber at one axial end thereof.
The fluid to be separated is fed into the main chamber and the less dense separated component is withdrawn from the upper regions (typically from a collector dome) of the main chamber. The two components are separated by tortuous passage through separation means such as a plate pack in passage from the main chamber to the secondary chamber, separation being achieved by the tortuous passage and the denser component passing through into the secondary chamber.
We have sought to improve upon this prior proposal in a way which allows similar or enhanced efficiency of separation to be achieved in an apparatus of lesser overall dimensions for substantially the same through-put.
We describe below a preferred embodiment of apparatus in accordance with this invention for separation of a suspension of two immiscible fluid components, which apparatus comprises a generally cylindrical pressure vessel having a main chamber and a secondary chamber at one axial end thereof, and being provided with an inlet opening into the main chamber, a first outlet for the less dense component exiting from the main chamber and a second outlet for the denser component exiting from the secondary chamber; and a separation means being mounted within the main chamber and adapted to provide tortuous passage for fluid from the main chamber to the secondary chamber, whereby the two fluid components tend to be separated by passage through said separation means, whereby the less dense component tends to collect in the upper part of the main chamber and the denser component tends to pass through into the secondary chamber, the separation means being generally rectangular in external configuration in axial section of the vessel; and the inlet comprising an inlet pipe which enters the main chamber at a position away from the secondary chamber, the inlet pipe being divided into a plurality of discharge pipes extending through the space between the exterior of the separation means and the cylindrical wall of the main chamber and terminating short of the dividing wall separating the main chamber from the secondary chamber.
As will be evident, this arrangement results in incoming fluid being subject first to flow division and then to flow reversal twice before passing in to the separation means. Our tests have shown that this incoming flow pattern aids in separation of suspended oil from water. In this arrangement, incoming fluid discharged at the ends of the discharge pipes passes back along the whole length of the discharge pipes externally thereof before entering the separation means, which preferably comprises a so-called "plate pack" comprising a series of sinusoidal plates mounted effectively within a box like volume.
In an alternative aspect of the present invention, we provide a method for separating the denser and less dense components of a suspension of two immiscible fluid components, the method comprising causing the less dense component to disentrain by causing the fluid to pass by tortuous passage through a separation means, and separating such disentrained less dense component, characterised in that incoming fluid is subject first to flow division and then to flow reversal twice before passing into the separation means.
As a final separation of the less dense component from the denser component in the secondary chamber, the secondary chamber may be provided with a weir across the upper half thereof so that fluid entering the secondary chamber must pass underneath the weir in order to reach the outlet. During the dwell time of the fluid in the secondary chamber, minor remaining quantities of the less dense component tend to separate. Such minor quantities disentrained from the denser component tend to remain in the space preceding the weir.
The invention is hereinafter more particularly described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 1 is a schematic longitudinal sectional view of a previously proposed separation apparatus; Figure 2 is a sectional view taken along the line Il-Il in Fig. 1; Figure 3 is a view generally similar to Fig. 1 but of a preferred embodiment of apparatus constructed in accordance with the present invention; Figure 4 is a sectional view taken along the line IV-IV in Fig. 3; Figure 5 is a sectional view taken along the line V-V in Fig. 3; Figure 6 is a sectional view taken along the line Vl-VI in Fig. 3; Figure 7 is a view generally similar to Fig. 3 of a modified embodiment also in accordance with the present invention; and Figure 8 is a sectional view taken along the line VIll-VIll in Fig. 7.
Incoming fluid, typically a suspension of oil droplets in water is pumped into cylindrical pressure vessel 1 of Fig. 1 under pressure, for example by means of a positive displacement low emulsifying pump. The incoming fluid enters main chamber 2 of vessel 1 through an inlet pipe 3 which extends to a position near the bottom of the chamber at a position close to a weir 4 over which the fluid must pass.
This arrangement imparts upward flow in the incoming flow which aids the separation of oil droplets. The fluid then passes into a so-called "plate pack" 5 mounted in the main chamber and comprising a series of sinusoidal plates mounted effectively within a box like volume.
This creates a tortuous path for the fluid which aids in coalescence and separation of oil from water. The oil (open arrows in the drawing) passes out of the top of the plate pack being less dense than water and collects in a collector dome 6 from which it is withdrawn through an outlet 7. The denser water (black arrows in the drawing) passes out through the end of the plate pack into a secondary chamber 8 from whence it is withdrawn through an outlet 9.
Practical embodiments of the prior arrangement illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2 tended to be bulky being in the region of 3 metres long and, together with the associated piping and pumping means, some 2 metres tall overall.
Clearly the larger the apparatus, the greater quantity of material is required in its manufacture and so the more expensive it tends to be.
While practical embodiments of this apparatus could provide a passable degree of separation of oil from water, significant quantities of oil droplets remained entrained with the outgoing water.
It will be seen immediately by comparison that the embodiment of Fig.3 which is constructed in accordance with the present invention is significantly more compact than the arrangement of Fig. 1. In this case, the inlet pipe 3, which enters the main chamber at a position away from the secondary chamber, is connected to a flow divider 10 (see Fig. 4) which divides the incoming fluid flow and passes it to a plurality of discharge pipes 11.
As is best shown in Fig. 5, the discharge pipes (here 2 in number) extend through the space which remains between the exterior of the plate-pack separation means and the inner cylindrical wall of the main chamber. Pipes 11 discharge close to dividing wall 12 which separates the main chamber from the secondary chamber. Fluid discharged at the ends of the discharge pipes 11 must pass back along the whole length of the discharge pipes externally thereof before it can enter the plate pack 5. The distance between discharge from the inlet pipe and entry into the plate pack during which incoming fluid must pass through fluid in the vessel 1 is of importance since it allows coalescing oil droplets to be disentrained and to rise to the upper part of the vessel.It is for this reason that it is impractical to make the arrangement of Fig. 1 more compact by bringing the plate pack closer to the weir 4.
Our tests have shown that the incoming flow pattern of the embodiment of Fig. 3 aids in separation of suspended oil from water. The fluid flow is subject first to flow division and then to flow reversal firstly at the discharge ends of the pipes 11 and then upon entry into the plate pack.
It will be understood that the incoming flow could pass into more than two discharge pipes.
Pressure vessels of the kind described hereinabove are manufactured so that an end portion is detachable from the main part of the vessel for cleaning, maintenance and repair. In our arrangement the plate pack 5 is mounted on an end plate 12 which is trapped between respective flanges 13, 14 of the two portions 1 a and 1 b of the vessel 1 so that the plate pack can be removed as a whole from the interior of the vessel. The denser water entering the secondary chamber 8 must pass under a weir 15 to reach outlet pipe 9.
During the dwell time of the fluid in the secondary chamber, minor remaining quantities of the less dense oil component tend to separate. Such minor quantities disentrained from the denser water component tend to remain in the space preceding the weir.
Our tests employing an embodiment as shown in Figs. 3 to 6 have shown an enhanced efficiency of separation of oil from water as compared with the embodiment of Figs. 1 and 2.
Various arrangements are possible for the plate pack 5. The plate pack may comprise a plurality of horizontally arranged sinusoidal plates with the peaks and troughs transverse to the general direction of flow of the denser component through the plate pack. Alternatively, the plates may be somewhat inclined at an angle between the horizontal and vertical and with the troughs and peaks in the individual plates again extending generally transverse to the flow direction of the denser component through the plate pack. The most preferred arrangement is that schematically illustrated in Figs. 7 and 8 of the accompanying drawings. In this arrangement, the plate pack 5a comprises both vertically disposed sinusoidal plates 16 and generally horizontally disposed sinusoidal plates 17.As will be seen from Figs. 7 and 8, the vertically disposed plates are disposed upstream, so far as the denser component is concerned, of the horizontally disposed plates. This arrangement has been found to be of particular benefit when an oil-water bilge contains significant quantities of solid matter or dirt. Oil being less dense than water separates and tends to move upward. In so doing, it impinges on the undersides of individual sinusoids where it accumulates until it has sufficient buoyancy to break clear of the surface of the plate and to rise upwards until it contacts the next vertically higher sinusoidal surface, the process then repeating.Dirt, on the other hand, being more dense than the denser liquid component, here water, settles out on the downwardly sloping surfaces of individual sinusoids, collecting there until the total mass collected overcomes the surface adhesion to the plate, at which point the mass of dirt slides off the sinusoidal surface and in doing so avalanches down the plate to collect at the bottom. As will be understood, this avalanche effect results in a self-cleaning function.
The horizontally disposed plates operate in the generally conventional fashion; that is, the tortuous path of fluid generally horizontally through the plate pack results in impingement of the fluid against successive surfaces of the pack tending to coalesce droplets of oil. Separated oil collects in the peaks of the sinusoidal surfaces and passes upward through bleed holes therein.
It will, of course, be appreciated that while the invention has been described hereinabove with particular reference to the separation of oil from water, the invention is not restricted to this one utility. Embodiments of apparatus constructed in accordance with this invention may find utility wherever it is desired to separate two immiscible components, one being denser than the other.

Claims (10)

1. Apparatus for separation of a suspension of two immiscible fluid components, which apparatus comprises: a generally cylindrical pressure vessel having a main chamber and a secondary chamber at one axial end thereof, and being provided with an inlet opening into the main chamber, a first outlet for the less dense component exiting from the main chamber and a second outlet for the denser component exiting from the secondary chamber; and a separation means mounted within the main chamber and adapted to provide tortuous passage for fluid from the main chamber to the secondary chamber, whereby the two fluid components tend to be separated by passage through said separation means, whereby the less dense component tends to collect in the upper part of the main chamber and the denser component tends to pass through into the secondary chamber, the separation means being generally rectangular in external configuration in axial section of the vessel; and the inlet comprising an inlet pipe which enters the main chamber at a position away from the secondary chamber, the inlet pipe being divided into a plurality of discharge pipes extending through the space between the exterior of the separation means and the cylindrical wall of the main chamber and terminating short of the dividing wall separating the main chamber from the secondary chamber.
2. Apparatus according to Claim 1, wherein the separation means comprises a plate pack having a series of sinusoidal plates mounted within a box-like volume.
3. Apparatus according to Claim 2, wherein the plate pack comprises a first series of generally vertically disposed sinusoidal plates with the peaks and troughs disposed generally in the direction of flow of the denser component through the plate pack; and a second series of generally horizontally disposed sinusoidal plates mounted downstream of the first series relative to the flow direction of the denser component through the plate pack, the peaks and troughs of the second series extending generally transverse to the flow direction of the denser component through the plate pack.
4. Apparatus according to Claims 2 or 3 wherein the cylindrical pressure vessel comprises a main portion and an end portion detachable from the main portion for cleaning, maintenance and repair of the interior of the pressure vessel; and wherein the plate pack is mounted on an end plate which is trapped in use between respective flanges formed on the main portion and end portion of the pressure vessel where these meet, the arrangement being such that when the end portion is detached from the main portion, the plate pack may be removed as a whole from the interior of the vessel.
5. Apparatus according to any preceding Claim, wherein the secondary chamber is provided with a wier across the upper portion thereof so that fluid entering the secondary chamber must pass underneath the wier in order to reach the second outlet, the arrangement being such that minor remaining quantities of the less dense component tend to disentrain during the dwell time of the fluid within the secondary chamber and to collect in the space preceding the wier.
6. For the separation of a suspension of two immiscible fluid components, apparatus substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as shown in Figs. 3 to 8 of the accompanying drawings.
7. A method for separating the denser and less dense components of a suspension of two immiscible fluid components, the method comprising causing the less dense component to disentrain by causing the fluid to pass by tortuous passage through a separation means, and separating such disentrained less dense component, characterised in that incoming fluid is subject first to flow division and then to flow reversal twice before passing into the separation means.
8. A method according to Claim 7, wherein the separation means through which the fluid is caused to pass comprises a first series of sinusoidal plates disposed generally vertically with individual peaks and troughs extending generally in the direction of flow of the denser component through the separation means, and a second series of generally horizontally disposed sinusoidal plates with the individual peaks and troughs thereof extending generally transverse to the flow direction of the denser component through the separation means.
9. A method according to Claims 7 or 8, wherein the denser component after passage through the separation means is caused to pass beneath a weir in order to reach an outlet, the dwell time of the fluid before the weir being such that minor remaining quantities of the less dense component in the denser component tend to disentrain.
10. For separating the lesser and denser components of a suspension of two immiscible fluid components, a method substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Figs. 3 to 8 of the accompanying drawings.
GB7940588A 1978-11-24 1979-11-23 Separation of immiscible liquids Expired GB2035118B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7940588A GB2035118B (en) 1978-11-24 1979-11-23 Separation of immiscible liquids

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7846046 1978-11-24
GB7940588A GB2035118B (en) 1978-11-24 1979-11-23 Separation of immiscible liquids

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2035118A true GB2035118A (en) 1980-06-18
GB2035118B GB2035118B (en) 1982-11-03

Family

ID=26269733

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB7940588A Expired GB2035118B (en) 1978-11-24 1979-11-23 Separation of immiscible liquids

Country Status (1)

Country Link
GB (1) GB2035118B (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0054793A1 (en) * 1980-12-24 1982-06-30 Allied Corporation Apparatus and process for treating a fluid
DE3206416A1 (en) * 1981-02-27 1982-09-16 Pielkenrood-Vinitex Beheer B.V., Assendelft MULTI-PHASE SEPARATOR
US4385986A (en) * 1981-04-08 1983-05-31 Nelson Industries, Inc. Gravity separator for separating liquids
US4636320A (en) * 1980-12-24 1987-01-13 Allied Corporation Process for removal of surface films from non-absorbent articles
GB2255515A (en) * 1991-05-07 1992-11-11 Richard Pierpont Moore Settling tank

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0054793A1 (en) * 1980-12-24 1982-06-30 Allied Corporation Apparatus and process for treating a fluid
US4636320A (en) * 1980-12-24 1987-01-13 Allied Corporation Process for removal of surface films from non-absorbent articles
DE3206416A1 (en) * 1981-02-27 1982-09-16 Pielkenrood-Vinitex Beheer B.V., Assendelft MULTI-PHASE SEPARATOR
US4385986A (en) * 1981-04-08 1983-05-31 Nelson Industries, Inc. Gravity separator for separating liquids
GB2255515A (en) * 1991-05-07 1992-11-11 Richard Pierpont Moore Settling tank
GB2255515B (en) * 1991-05-07 1996-01-03 Richard Pierpont Moore Specific gravity separating unit

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2035118B (en) 1982-11-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP2308581B1 (en) Air-oil separator for an air compressor and installation for the compression of air
US4278545A (en) Apparatus for separating solids and liquid components
KR100559350B1 (en) Method for the separation of a first liquid from a second one
DE102006017635A1 (en) Multi-stage device for separating drops of liquid from gases
WO2001044118A2 (en) Combined process vessel apparatus
US11285405B2 (en) Inclined linear multi-phase gravity separation system
US4299706A (en) Separation of a suspension of two immiscible fluids
US10272365B2 (en) Multi-phase emulsion separator with directed flow channels
US4213865A (en) Apparatus for separating sludge, oil and the like from contaminated water
BE1011906A3 (en) Device for separating two immiscible liquids WITH DIFFERENT DENSITY.
GB2116447A (en) Phase separation device
GB2035118A (en) Separation of immiscible liquids
US3208596A (en) Lubricating oil clarifier and coalescer
US801679A (en) Separator for liquids of different density.
US11268361B2 (en) Separation assembly
RU2191618C2 (en) Method of separation of unstable dispersed systems and device for realization of this method
SU973142A1 (en) Device for combine preparing gas, oil and water
RU201353U1 (en) Oil and gas separator with water discharge for viscous gas-liquid emulsions
RU23054U1 (en) Sedimentation tank
RU194354U1 (en) Oil sump
CN218924205U (en) Multistage oil separator for ship
RU2198014C1 (en) Device for separation of particles of solid substances and fluid media of higher density from fluid media of lower density
SU982717A1 (en) Apparatus for separating gas-liquid mixtures
SU1017775A1 (en) Apparatus for collecting oil off water surface
SU1296231A1 (en) Separator

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee