If the heavier hydrocarbons are dissolved in the gas as gas components, no knocking out should be expected just from passing the gas through a separating vessel.
However, if I got it right, the liquid laden gas stream is already the result of a previous "equilibrium" condition, such as from cooling the gas, and the pre-existing knock out vessel operates at the same T,P of the main stream.
I understand dtai refers to a liquid-gas vertical separator (aka KOD) to remove heavier hydrocarbon liquid droplets from a gas stream.
The droplet size range of the suspended heavy hydrocarbons should be defined. For example, if it is a mist, the average droplet diameter is 50-100 micrometers.
For such a drop diameter the corresponding gravity terminal settling velocity would be around 1 fps. It could be better estimated by the use of Brown & Sounders constant K, as follows:
V = K[(dL-dG)/dG]0.5
where
K: the B&S constant that can be found from published graphs
dG, dL: the densities of the gas and the liquid, respectively
Re-entrainment can be reduced by imparting the entering gas a centrifugal motion. A centrifugal force is generated that may be more than hundred times gravity in small units operating at high pressures. Besides, entrainment is sharply reduced as impingement type internals are added to the KOD.
There is one article in the Hydrocarbon Processing issue of June 1990, titled Selecting gas/liquid separators by P.G. Talavera, that may be of value.
But then, again, I may have misinterpreted dtai's post;
dtai is invited to tell us whether I'm right or wrong.