Evaporation is a
unit operation. It comes under the unit operation of simultaneous heat and mass
transfer. Evaporation means the removal of solvent as vapour from a solution or
slurry under such conditions that no attempt is made to separate components of
the vapour. In majority of evaporation process the solvent is water and latent
heat for evaporation is supplied by condensing steam and heat from the steam is
transmitted to the solution indirectly through the metallic surfaces.
Basic
Factors of Evaporation: For effective evaporation of a liquid,
two essential things must be provided.
Necessary heat must be
supplied: The heat may be supplied by direct exposure to the liquid or
indirectly by transmission through suitable solid retaining wall. The vapour evolved must be
removed continuously: The removal of vapour may be carried out either by mixing
it with some inert gas or as undiluted vapour.
Three principal
elements involved in an evaporator are:
- Heat transfer
- Vapour-liquid separation
- Energy utilization
- It must transfer maximum amount of heat.
- It must efficiently separate vapour from the residual liquid.
- It must make an efficient use of the available heat or mechanical energy as is economically feasible.
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