Practice for Interconversion of Analysis of C5 and Lighter Hydrocarbons to Gas-Volume, Liquid-Volume, or Mass Basis

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keyword(s):  
Processes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 1075
Author(s):  
Fabiana Lanzillo ◽  
Giacomo Ruggiero ◽  
Francesca Raganati ◽  
Maria Elena Russo ◽  
Antonio Marzocchella

Syngas (CO, CO2, and H2) has attracted special attention due to the double benefit of syngas fermentation for carbon sequestration (pollution reduction), while generating energy. Syngas can be either produced by gasification of biomasses or as a by-product of industrial processes. Only few microorganisms, mainly clostridia, were identified as capable of using syngas as a substrate to produce medium chain acids, or alcohols (such as butyric acid, butanol, hexanoic acid, and hexanol). Since CO plays a critical role in the availability of reducing equivalents and carbon conversion, this work assessed the effects of constant CO partial pressure (PCO), ranging from 0.5 to 2.5 atm, on cell growth, acid production, and solvent production, using Clostridium carboxidivorans. Moreover, this work focused on the effect of the liquid to gas volume ratio (VL/VG) on fermentation performances; in particular, two VL/VG were considered (0.28 and 0.92). The main results included—(a) PCO affected the growth kinetics of the microorganism; indeed, C. carboxidivorans growth rate was characterized by CO inhibition within the investigated range of CO concentration, and the optimal PCO was 1.1 atm (corresponding to a dissolved CO concentration of about 25 mg/L) for both VL/VG used; (b) growth differences were observed when the gas-to-liquid volume ratio changed; mass transport phenomena did not control the CO uptake for VL/VG = 0.28; on the contrary, the experimental CO depletion rate was about equal to the transport rate in the case of VL/VG = 0.92.


2002 ◽  
Vol 453 ◽  
pp. 395-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRÉDÉRIC RISSO ◽  
KJETIL ELLINGSEN

An experimental investigation of a homogeneous swarm of rising bubbles is presented. The experimental arrangement ensures that all the bubbles have the same equivalent radius, a = 1.25 mm. This particular size corresponds to high-Reynolds-number ellipsoidal rising bubbles. The gas volume fractions α is small, ranging from 0.5 to 1.05%. The results are compared with the reference situation of a single rising bubble, which was investigated in a previous work. From the use of conditional statistics, the existence of two regions in which the liquid velocity fluctuations are of a different nature are distinguished. In the vicinity of the bubbles, the liquid fluctuations are the same as those measured close to a single rising bubble. They therefore do not depend on α. Far from the bubble, the liquid fluctuations are controlled by the nonlinear interactions between the wakes of all the bubbles. Their probability density function scales as α0.4, exhibiting a self-similar behaviour. The total fluctuation combines the contributions of these two regions weighted by the fraction of the liquid volume they occupy. The contribution of the bubble vicinity is thus shown to vary linearly with α while the wake contribution does not. Both are non-isotropic since strong upward vertical fluctuations are more probable.


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