Publication detail

Packing versus cavity: Zone-Specific contributions to mass transfer in rotating packed bed absorption process

BLATKIEWICZ, M. MAJDZIK, M. LEWANDOWSKI, G. PIĄTKOWSKI, M. JASKULSKI, M. HÁJEK, O. MALÝ, M. GORAK, A.

English title

Packing versus cavity: Zone-Specific contributions to mass transfer in rotating packed bed absorption process

Type

journal article in Web of Science

Language

en

Original abstract

A pilot-size rotating packed bed unit has been equipped with an infrared system for liquid phase analysis and a special interceptor that allows for online sampling of the absorbent solution at two points in the RPB: the outer periphery of the packing and the liquid outlet. Such a system allows to determine specific contributions of the packing zone and the cavity zone to the overall mass transfer. A standard chemical system of carbon dioxide and an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide was used to determine reactive absorption efficiency under different packing and outer casing diameters, as well as varying rotational speeds, gas and liquid flow rates, and inlet absorbate concentrations. CO2 removal up to 27 % was achieved. Depending on geometrical configurations and process conditions, the cavity zone contribution in total absorption efficiency varied between 0 % and 46 %. Outer casing diameter had deciding effect on the mass transfer in the cavity zone, but it was also significantly affected by the packing size and rotational speed.

English abstract

A pilot-size rotating packed bed unit has been equipped with an infrared system for liquid phase analysis and a special interceptor that allows for online sampling of the absorbent solution at two points in the RPB: the outer periphery of the packing and the liquid outlet. Such a system allows to determine specific contributions of the packing zone and the cavity zone to the overall mass transfer. A standard chemical system of carbon dioxide and an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide was used to determine reactive absorption efficiency under different packing and outer casing diameters, as well as varying rotational speeds, gas and liquid flow rates, and inlet absorbate concentrations. CO2 removal up to 27 % was achieved. Depending on geometrical configurations and process conditions, the cavity zone contribution in total absorption efficiency varied between 0 % and 46 %. Outer casing diameter had deciding effect on the mass transfer in the cavity zone, but it was also significantly affected by the packing size and rotational speed.

Keywords in English

Rotating packed bed; Absorption; Packing zone; Cavity zone; Process intensification; HiGee

Released

11.08.2025

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA

Location

LAUSANNE

ISSN

0255-2701

Volume

216

Number

1

Pages from–to

1–12

Pages count

12

BIBTEX


@article{BUT198554,
  author="Michal {Blatkiewicz} and Małgorzata {Majdzik} and Gniewomir {Lewandowski} and Marcin {Piątkowski} and Maciej {Jaskulski} and Ondřej {Hájek} and Milan {Malý} and Andrzej {Gorak},
  title="Packing versus cavity: Zone-Specific contributions to mass transfer in rotating packed bed absorption process",
  year="2025",
  volume="216",
  number="1",
  month="August",
  pages="1--12",
  publisher="ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA",
  address="LAUSANNE",
  issn="0255-2701"
}