A Chemical Reaction Engineering Analysis of the Blow-Out Process for Bromine Manufacture from Seawater

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Journal Title, Volume, Page: 
Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research, 46(10) 3008-3015
Year of Publication: 
2007
Authors: 
A.M. El-Hamouz and R. Mann,
Chemical Engineering Department, An-Najah National University, P.O. Box 7, Nablus, Palestine
Current Affiliation: 
Chemical Engineering Department, An-Najah National University, P.O. Box 7, Nablus, Palestine
R. Mann
School of Chemical Engineering and Analytical Science, The Uni V ersity of Manchester
Preferred Abstract (Original): 
A chemical reaction engineering model has been constructed to describe the extraction and recovery of bromine from a once-through seawater flow. The process uses a closed-loop circulation flow of air. This strips out free bromine from pre-chlorinated seawater in a packed column. Bromine liberated into the gas reacts with injected sulfur dioxide around a circulation loop to form liquid droplets containing product hydrobromic acid captured by mist elimination. Excesses of chlorine and sulfur dioxide compete for bromine and can reduce the recovery efficiency. Pseudo-homogeneous gas-phase kinetics accounts for simultaneous absorption and gas−liquid reaction of liberated bromine, excess chlorine, and injected sulfur dioxide. Re-circulating sulfur dioxide subsequently absorbs and reacts simultaneously with bromine and chlorine stripping. Parameter values are deduced for typical bromine recovery of 70%. The model can be used for optimizing the excesses of chlorine and sulfur dioxide.