
Figure 1. An air stripper
'Air stripping' is the transferring of
volatile components of a liquid into an air stream. It is a
chemical engineering technology used for the purification of groundwaters and wastewaters containing volatile compounds.
Volatile compounds have relatively high
vapor pressure and low aqueous solubility characterized by the compound’s dimensionless
Henry's law coefficient, which is the ratio of the concentration in air that is in equilibrium with its concentration in water. Pollutants with relatively high Henry’s Law coefficients can be economically stripped from water. These include
BTEX compounds (
benzene,
toluene,
ethylbenzene, and
xylene found in gasoline, and solvents including
trichloroethylene and
tetrachloroethylene.
Ammonia can also be stripped from wastewaters. Since Henry’s law coefficient increases with temperature, stripping is easier at warmer temperatures.
Air Strippers
Although any device that promotes contact between air and water strips some volatile compounds, air strippers are usually packed towers or
tray towers operated with countercurrent flow of water and air. Packed towers, such as shown in Figure 1, usually use engineered or random plastic packings. Design criteria for packed towers include surface area provided by the packing, column height and diameter, and air to water flow rates.
Since many of the compounds stripped are
hazardous air pollutants, the air exiting a stripper may require emissions control.
Carbon adsorption is often used and
catalytic oxidation is another option.
See also
★
Continuous distillation
★
Fractionating column
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Steam distillation
★
Theoretical plate
Recommended reading
★
Distillation Design, Henry Z. Kister, , , McGraw-Hill, 1992, ISBN 0-07-034909-6
★
Perry's Chemical Engineers' Handbook, Perry, R.H. and Green, D.W. (Editors), , , McGraw-Hill, 1997, ISBN 0-07-049841-5
External links
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Air Stripping from a website page of the Federal Remediation Technologies Roundtable
★
Air Stripping of VOCs from Water
★
Air Stripping, Design Guide 1110-1-3 from wbsite page of the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers