Sorry, I won't be doing your fishing for you- teaching you to fish for yourself is all I can offer.
If you were making ferrous sulphate, you'd be out of luck obviously!
Assuming you don't have a simulator handy, I'd suggest you set up a very crude model- assume that the bubbling tank is, say, 80% of a theoretical stage (i.e. you get the exiting air up to about 80% saturation of water vapour at the temperature of the liquor at any point in time). That's a total guess- you can get more accurate guesses from a simulator or more detailed calcs- or you can just set the % approach to a theoretical stage as another variable.
Set up a finite difference table in Excel, with a time period of about a minute or so. You know the mass and heat capacity of the material in the tank. Set an air mass flow, and see how much heat you remove with a minute's worth of air, how much the temperature drops, how much water you lose, and what the new vapour pressure of water is at that temperature. If you think the sensible heat capacity of the air itself will help, you can add that in too, but it's probably negligible. By difference, set up the conditions for the next minute, and the next...
Once you come up with an air mass flow that's necessary to do what you want, you can dig through Perry's or McCabe, Smith & Harriot or Treybal or the like to find out if that's a reasonable amount of air to bubble through that much water- what gas hold up you should expect, whether or not that will overflow your tank, and whether or not the cost of the blower will bankrupt you or the air will overwhelm the scrubber etc. Of course, if your solution foams, you're screwed.
Best of luck- others here might want to suggest better models, or you might come up with one yourself.