US1331373A - Evaporating and crystallizing apparatus especially adapted for obtaining large crystals - Google Patents

Evaporating and crystallizing apparatus especially adapted for obtaining large crystals Download PDF

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US1331373A
US1331373A US209600A US20960017A US1331373A US 1331373 A US1331373 A US 1331373A US 209600 A US209600 A US 209600A US 20960017 A US20960017 A US 20960017A US 1331373 A US1331373 A US 1331373A
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evaporating
crystals
liquid
large crystals
especially adapted
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Prache Charles
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C01INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C01DCOMPOUNDS OF ALKALI METALS, i.e. LITHIUM, SODIUM, POTASSIUM, RUBIDIUM, CAESIUM, OR FRANCIUM
    • C01D3/00Halides of sodium, potassium or alkali metals in general
    • C01D3/04Chlorides
    • C01D3/06Preparation by working up brines; seawater or spent lyes

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  • This invention has for its object an evaporating apparatus intended for the concentration of such saline solutions which while boiling allow crystals to be deposited; for example, brine, electrolytic soda salts, etc.
  • Apparatus according to this invention allows on the contrary salt to be obtained in well formed crystals from a liquid evaporating at great speed by circulation in contact with the heating surface, an arrangement which allows the heating surface to be employed with great efiiciency while obtaining crystals large enough to be easily separated from their mother liquor and easy to wash.
  • FIG. 1 is a'vertical section and Fig. 2 a horizontal section.
  • this apparatus 1 is a vertical cylindrical receiver or evaporator connected by a conical portion 2 to a cylindrical portion 3 of suitable diameter but less than that of the receiver 1.
  • the cylindrical portion 3 is connected to a cylindro-conical portion 4 which forms a reservoir for the crystalline products formed in the upper portions; the crystals may be removed through a valve 5.
  • 6 is a vertical partition within the receiver 1 extending for a certain height. It is so arranged as to Specification of Letters Patent.
  • a tubular reheater or superheater whose tubes are heated outwardly by steam admitted through the pipe 10, condensed steam passing out through the pipe 11.
  • the upper portion of this reheater is in communication with the interior of the vaporizer 1 through a sloping pipe 12 which passes centrally through the receiver and then through the partition 6 into a chamber 13 comprised between the partition-6 and the wall of the vaporizer 1.
  • the tube 12 terminates in a horizontal cylindro-conical casing whose open end is situated at some distance from the wall ofthe vaporizer 1; 14 is a propelling screw arranged centrally within the casing and having a horizontal aXis the shaft of which is driven from the outside by an electric motor 15 or in any other manner.
  • the bottom of the reheater 9 is connected to the lower portion 4 of the apparatus by a bent pipe 16, the pipe being continued by an upwardly rising bent pipe 17 arranged axially within the vaporizer.
  • the apparatus works as follows:
  • the apparatus is filled with liquid to be concentrated to the level 18 which is situated a little above the upper portion of the partition 6 and the screw 1 1 is put into motion; liquid contained in the chamber 13 is drawn therefrom into'the pipe 12 so causing a flow of liquid in the rest of the apparatus but mainly in the upper portions as indicated by arrows.
  • Liquid is delivered by the pipe 12 into the tubes of the reheater 9 and then out through the bent pipe 17 vertically upward into the center of the cylindrical portion 3; steam is at the same time admitted into the reheating chamber through the pipe 10.
  • the ascending current in the vaporizer and especially in the cylindrical portion 3' acts as a classifier which prevents the entry of the crystals into the depositing chamber 4 so long as these have not attained a sufficient size, which depends moreover on the speed ofthe liquid in the cylindrical portion 3.
  • a certain portion of the fine crystals may pass with the liquid into the propelling by the cooling of the pipes if thesewere outside'the apparatus, are thus prevented; de-
  • a vertical receptacle the upper portion of which is adapted to contain the saline solution to be evaporated, the lower portion of which is tubular and of smaller cross-section and serves as a crystal seeding and separating chamber, a conduit, one end of which opens into the lower part of said upper portion and the opposite end opens upward into said tubular portion above the bottom thereof, means external to said receptacle for heating said conduit, and means located in said evaporating portion of said receptacle for forcing liquid in-the evaporating portion downward through said heated conduit into said tubular portion against the hydrostatic pressure in said receptacle to efi'ect ebullitiontherein and sustain in the boiling solu tion the separatin crystals till they grow to a predetermine size and then fall.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Vaporization, Distillation, Condensation, Sublimation, And Cold Traps (AREA)
  • Organic Low-Molecular-Weight Compounds And Preparation Thereof (AREA)

Description

C. PRACHE. EVAPORATING AND CRYSIALLIZING-APPARATUS ESPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR OBTAINING LARGE CRYSTALS.
r APPLICATION FILED DEC.29, 1917- 1,331,373.
Patented Feb. 17, 1920.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
CHARLES PRACHE, OF PARIS, FRANCE.
EVAPORATING AND CRYSTALLIZING APPARATUS ESPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR OBTAINING LARGE CRYSTALS.
Application filed December 29, 1917.
To all whom it may concern:
' Be it known that I, CHARLES PRAGHE, of
. taining Large Crystals, which improvements are fully set forth in the following specification.
This invention has for its object an evaporating apparatus intended for the concentration of such saline solutions which while boiling allow crystals to be deposited; for example, brine, electrolytic soda salts, etc.
It is known that to obtain a good transmission of heat in Vaporizers, the liquid in evaporation should circulate rapidly in contact with the heating surfaces. On the other hand, it is also known that the salt produced in saline solutions by their evaporation while in movement is always in the form of powder; the crystals are very difficult to sepa rate from the mother liquor which surrounds them, and to wash whether by filtration or by drying. t
The only process actually employed for obtaining large crystals of salt by evaporation consists in slowly evaporating brine in a stationary and boiling liquid, a process which is necessarily wasteful.
Apparatus according to this invention allows on the contrary salt to be obtained in well formed crystals from a liquid evaporating at great speed by circulation in contact with the heating surface, an arrangement which allows the heating surface to be employed with great efiiciency while obtaining crystals large enough to be easily separated from their mother liquor and easy to wash.
Apparatus according to this invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 is a'vertical section and Fig. 2 a horizontal section. In this apparatus 1 is a vertical cylindrical receiver or evaporator connected by a conical portion 2 to a cylindrical portion 3 of suitable diameter but less than that of the receiver 1. The cylindrical portion 3 is connected to a cylindro-conical portion 4 which forms a reservoir for the crystalline products formed in the upper portions; the crystals may be removed through a valve 5. 6 is a vertical partition within the receiver 1 extending for a certain height. It is so arranged as to Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Feb.'1 7, 1920.
Serial No. 209,600.
leave a free passage 8, and with this object is suspended on the wall of the receiver 1 by lugs 7 I 9 is a tubular reheater or superheater whose tubes are heated outwardly by steam admitted through the pipe 10, condensed steam passing out through the pipe 11. The upper portion of this reheater is in communication with the interior of the vaporizer 1 through a sloping pipe 12 which passes centrally through the receiver and then through the partition 6 into a chamber 13 comprised between the partition-6 and the wall of the vaporizer 1. The tube 12 terminates in a horizontal cylindro-conical casing whose open end is situated at some distance from the wall ofthe vaporizer 1; 14 is a propelling screw arranged centrally within the casing and having a horizontal aXis the shaft of which is driven from the outside by an electric motor 15 or in any other manner.
The bottom of the reheater 9 is connected to the lower portion 4 of the apparatus by a bent pipe 16, the pipe being continued by an upwardly rising bent pipe 17 arranged axially within the vaporizer.
The apparatus works as follows:
The apparatus is filled with liquid to be concentrated to the level 18 which is situated a little above the upper portion of the partition 6 and the screw 1 1 is put into motion; liquid contained in the chamber 13 is drawn therefrom into'the pipe 12 so causing a flow of liquid in the rest of the apparatus but mainly in the upper portions as indicated by arrows. Liquid is delivered by the pipe 12 into the tubes of the reheater 9 and then out through the bent pipe 17 vertically upward into the center of the cylindrical portion 3; steam is at the same time admitted into the reheating chamber through the pipe 10. The screwthuscauses liquid to travel continuously downward'in the reheater and continuously upward in the vaporizer; owing to the large difi'erence of level between the reheater and the level 18 of the liquid in the vaporizer and also owing to the excess of pressure given by the screw the pressure to which such liquid is subjected while passing through the tubes of the reheater 9 allows the liquid to be heated without entering into ebullition to a temperature above that at which it would pass liquid in ebullition passes out of the apparatus from the upper portion of the vaporizer 1, 1
When crystals of salt appear in the mass in ebullition the weight of each crystal formed has the tendency to cause it to pass to the bottom of the vaporizer, but by reason of the conical shape of the portion '2 the speed of the upward vertical circulation of the liquid is greatest in the cylindrical portion 3 and continuously decreases in the upper layers; the descent of the fine crystals is prevented by .such upward circulation until they have acquired a certain weight so that the crystals are maintained in suspension in the mass in ebullition and are forced to increase in size until their weight overcomes the dynamic thrust of the ascending current of circulating liquid when they can fall through the cylindrical portion 3 and reach the depositing chamber 4.
The ascending current in the vaporizer and especially in the cylindrical portion 3' acts as a classifier which prevents the entry of the crystals into the depositing chamber 4 so long as these have not attained a sufficient size, which depends moreover on the speed ofthe liquid in the cylindrical portion 3.
A certain portion of the fine crystals may pass with the liquid into the propelling by the cooling of the pipes if thesewere outside'the apparatus, are thus prevented; de-
posited crystals would attach themselves to the walls of the pipes and the circulation pump and prevent the apparatus working.
Claim:
In apparatus for evaporating saline solutions and for obtaining large crystals, a vertical receptacle the upper portion of which is adapted to contain the saline solution to be evaporated, the lower portion of which is tubular and of smaller cross-section and serves as a crystal seeding and separating chamber, a conduit, one end of which opens into the lower part of said upper portion and the opposite end opens upward into said tubular portion above the bottom thereof, means external to said receptacle for heating said conduit, and means located in said evaporating portion of said receptacle for forcing liquid in-the evaporating portion downward through said heated conduit into said tubular portion against the hydrostatic pressure in said receptacle to efi'ect ebullitiontherein and sustain in the boiling solu tion the separatin crystals till they grow to a predetermine size and then fall.
In testimony whereof I have signed this specification in the presence of two subscribing witnesses. I
CHARLES BRACHE. Witnesses:
GASTON DE MESTRAL, CHAs. P. PRESSLY.
US209600A 1917-12-29 1917-12-29 Evaporating and crystallizing apparatus especially adapted for obtaining large crystals Expired - Lifetime US1331373A (en)

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2631926A (en) * 1949-10-03 1953-03-17 Blaw Knox Co Apparatus for concentrating a solution and separating crystals therefrom
US2798543A (en) * 1953-09-03 1957-07-09 Robert S Cook Method and apparatus for concentrating solutions
US2924203A (en) * 1954-11-17 1960-02-09 Cleaver Brooks Co Heating unit for heat transfer liquid
US3074473A (en) * 1957-12-23 1963-01-22 H J Heinz Company Ltd Vertical tube evaporators with downward pressure liquid flow
US3261670A (en) * 1965-04-21 1966-07-19 Chicago Bridge & Iron Co Conispherical vessel for crystallization
US3607113A (en) * 1969-02-24 1971-09-21 Reynolds Metals Co Continuous precipitation of alumina hydrate
US4251502A (en) * 1978-06-28 1981-02-17 Erco Industries Limited Modular chlorine dioxide generation systems

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2631926A (en) * 1949-10-03 1953-03-17 Blaw Knox Co Apparatus for concentrating a solution and separating crystals therefrom
US2798543A (en) * 1953-09-03 1957-07-09 Robert S Cook Method and apparatus for concentrating solutions
US2924203A (en) * 1954-11-17 1960-02-09 Cleaver Brooks Co Heating unit for heat transfer liquid
US3074473A (en) * 1957-12-23 1963-01-22 H J Heinz Company Ltd Vertical tube evaporators with downward pressure liquid flow
US3261670A (en) * 1965-04-21 1966-07-19 Chicago Bridge & Iron Co Conispherical vessel for crystallization
US3607113A (en) * 1969-02-24 1971-09-21 Reynolds Metals Co Continuous precipitation of alumina hydrate
US4251502A (en) * 1978-06-28 1981-02-17 Erco Industries Limited Modular chlorine dioxide generation systems

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