NZBen
Mechanical
- Apr 2, 2007
- 26
I'm wanting to produce relativly small amounts of CO2 with a purity of at least food grade. I was hoping to do this by burning natural gas, compressing the exhaust and cooling through different temperature cooling columns. I figured in my simple brain this should work piece of cake - but reading on the net I've found that NOx and SOx has to be removed before the gas reaches the chilling stages of seperation.
The data I have at 1atm NO2 should liquify below 21 degc, SO2 should liquify below -10deg N2O below -88 and CO below -192 they should all be a bit hotter than that cos I'm wanting to do this at 6 bar - where CO2 should liquefy around -50 and I should be able to let the rest of the gas go? that hasn't condensed by that stage?
Any advice anyone can give me about this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
Ben
The data I have at 1atm NO2 should liquify below 21 degc, SO2 should liquify below -10deg N2O below -88 and CO below -192 they should all be a bit hotter than that cos I'm wanting to do this at 6 bar - where CO2 should liquefy around -50 and I should be able to let the rest of the gas go? that hasn't condensed by that stage?
Any advice anyone can give me about this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
Ben