On the Efficiency of Air Dryers

in pre-war days its recovery map have been unfavorably con- sidered in cane-growing countries, present conditions make the question worthy of consider...
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Sept., 1916

T H E J O U R N A L OF I N D U S T R I A L A N D ENGIArEERING C H E M I S T R Y

FUSEL OIL FROM CANE MOLASSES It is opportune, says the Int. Sugar Jown., to remind readers who have the control of cane molasses distilleries that fusel oil is a material very much in demand a t the present time'and that high prices for it are now ruling. Previous to the war the cost of raw fusel oil seldom fell below about 51 per gal., and $1 80 could perhaps be taken as a normal figure. At the moment, however, that product cannot be obtained for less than $2.52 to $3 per gallon, according to quality and it would seem that the price may be yet increased. Although the amount obtained from fermented cane molasses is less than in cases of sources such as grain, potatoes or the "inarc" of grapes and in pre-war days its recovery map have been unfavorably considered in cane-growing countries, present conditions make the question worthy of consideration particularly where patent stills are in operation. Those interested may be reminded that fusel oil enters the British Isles free of duty provided it contains less than 15 per cent of proof spirit.-M. CANADIAN WOOD-PULP INDUSTRY According to information received in London, the consumption of wood in Canada for the manufacture of pulp has increased threefold during the past eight years and, in the same period, the value of wood consumed for this purpose has increased from slightly under $3,000,000to nearly $9,jo0,ooo. Fifty mills reporting to the government show a consumption in 1915of 1,4oj,ooocords of wood valued a t $9,426,000with an average value of $6 71 per cord. Canada produced pulpwood in 1915valued a t $ I j,590,000,of which $6,164,000worth was exported. The province of Quebec leads in the number of mills and in the value of pulp-wood exported, possessing 24 out of the 5 0 mills in the Dominion and exporting $4,000,ooo worth of wood-pulp.-M. REMOVAL OF RESIN FROM SULFITE PULP The Paper-Maker, 52 (1916), 53, quoting from a German contemporary, states that the removal of resin from sulfite wood-pulp is best effected by washing with hot water, not in the digester but in the stuff-chest outside the digester. The

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usual method of sprinkling has not much cleansing effect because the rinsing water tends to take the shortest path 'from the inlet to the outlet so that large masses of stuff escape the washing altogether. It is recommended that the stuff be diluted largely with hot water and stirred up an$ washed by blowing in large quantities of air. The inlet tube for the hot water is situated underneath the false bottom and filtered air a t a pressure of 6 to 8 atmospheres is forced through a system of hard lead pipes to the false bottom. A charge of 15 tons of pulp can be washed in 37 minutes and the bleaching qualities of the pulp are improved by the treatment.-M. PORTUGAL OLIVE OIL PRODUCTION The Diario de Gooerno (Lisbon), of June 6, publishes an ofiicial statement giving the total production of olive oil for 1915 as 27,965,078liters. The stock of oil on March 20, 1916,'amounted to 33,904,475liters. The above mentioned issue of the Diario contains detailed statistics of the production and stocks in each of the oil-producing districts of the Republic.-M. TRADE OPENING IN BOLIVIA The British Consul at Oruro (Bolivia) reports that there is a shortage of many goods, especially of those required by the mining industries. The greater part of the machinery and electrical fittings was in the hands of German importers up to the outbreak of war, and there is now an opening in Bolivia for manufacturers and exporters who wish to secure a good and profitable market for mining requirements. There has been a great boom in mining recently in the state.-M. GREENLAND CRYOLITE Cryolite, says the Chemical Trade Journal, 59 (1916), 45, has been found in commercial quantities a t Ivigtut, an Eskimo hamlet on the southern coast of Greenland. The cryolite deposit is said to be a solid mass having surface dimensions of about 200 f t . X 600 f t . ; it has been worked as an open cut to a depth of about 150 ft. The deposit widens with depth and the depth is unknown.-M.

NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE ON THE EFFICIENCY OF AIR DRYERS

Editor of the Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry: With reference to the letter of Mr. W. E. Wadman' relative to the efficiency of air dryers, Mr. Wadman states that the "consumption of heat in an 'air dryer' for evaporating purposes is a perfectly definite thing and just as definite as in the case of the steam boiler." I n this Mr. Wadman is mistaken. Mr. Wadman states that it requires practically 1120 B. t. u. to evaporate I lb. of water in such a dryer under even the most ideal conditions, but to convince him of his error I propose to describe an air dryer so designed as to evaporate water a t a much lower heat consumption than this, and if any inherent impossibility attaches to the proposed method it will clear up the matter to have it pointed out. Assume a material which may be dried a t a temperature of 160' I?. without injury, but which can be dried successfully a t a temperature even as low as go'. Assume that the air supply is a t 50' with a dew point of 40°, carrying o.0052 lb. of water per lb. of dry air,2 that the material to be dried enters a t 60°, and that the specific heat of this material is negligible. 1 THIS JOURNAL, 8 (1916), 755. 2These calculations are made with the use of Grosvenor's curves, Supplement to Transactions of American Institute of Chemical Engineers, 1 (1908).

Let the air leaving this dryer have a temperature of 160' and a dew point of 140°, carrying 0.1514lb. of water per lb. of dry air. Instead of throwing this air away, let us use it as the heating element in another air dryer immediately beside the first, cooling the air to 100' and operating the dryer a t 90°, thus having available a temperature difference between heating element and air in the dryer of 10' a t the least, and with an average of much more than this. The air cooling to 100' will deposit 0.1090 lb. of water and give up 132.3B. t . u. It is theoretically possible to reduce the heat consumption of the first dryer to 1 1 0 2B. t. u. per lb. of water evaporated (the heat of vaporization a t 160" plus the heat necessary to heat up the water from 60'). The water evaporation per pound of dry air entering the first dryer is 0,1462,and the minimum heat z B. t. u. per lb. consumption in this dryer is therefore 161, of dry air. The theoretical consumption in the second dryer is 1081 B. t. u., and it is therefore possible in this dryer to evaporate 132.3/1081or 0.1223 lb. of water per lb. of dry air without the use of any additional heat. I n the two dryers we have therefore evaporated 0.2685 lb. on a heat consumption of 161,2 E. t. n. or 600 B. t. u. per lb. This of course assumes perfection in each of the units employed, but we can sacrifice 5 0 per cent efficiency and still be far below the limit specified by Mr. Wadman.

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T H E J O U R N A L OF I N D U S T R I A L A N D ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY

I t must be admitted that to secure a higher efficiency than corresponds to the figure quoted by Mr. Wadman, requires the condensation of the water evaporated and the recovery of the heat given up thereby. This amounts to an application of the principle of multiple-effect evaporation, but this principle can in ‘theory a t least be applied just as effectively in air drying as in ordinary evaporation. Furthermore, the only industrial obstacle t o a realization of these conditions is the low heat conductivity From gas through solid separating wall to gas, a fact which necessitates an enormous heating surface. In the discussion of several years ago a heat consumption resulting from a commercial test of a Ruggles-Coles dryer was quoted as below the figures stated by AIr. m’adman to be the theoretical minimum possible, and it was stated that such a result was impossible. Unlikely such a result may be, but it is not impossible, in the type of dryer employed. That dryer cools the gases to a remarkable extent, and under certain conditions the gases leaving the dryer coming in contact with the cold, wet material entering it are cooled below their dew point. This results in separation of moisture in the Form of fog, which is carried along by the gases. I t is easily possible for the heat given up upon condensation of this moisture to more than compensate for the fact that the gases are still higher in temperature than the air supply. Under such conditions the Ruggles-Coles dryer is effectively utilizing a part of the heat of condensation of the water once evaporated, and in this way is making use to a degree of the multiple-effect principle. While such conditions can arise only under unusual circumstances in that dryer, there is no inherent absurdity in the low heat quotation referred to, and it is readily conceivable that in the future that particular type of dryer may be perfected to the point where such re-utilization of the heat may become industrially practicable. Just because it is possible to lay out a dryer using air under atmospheric pressure which will evaporate water a t practically any heat consumption demanded, it must be admitted that there is no theoretical consumption for such an apparatus and therefore no meaning to the term “efficiency” as applied to air dryers. The writer feels very strongly that it is unfortunate to consider evaporation and air drying as unrelated, and that it is not true “that the two things are quite distinct;” on the contrary, the fundamental factors involved are identical while the differences are scarcely more than superficial, and appreciation of this is necessary to progress in the development of both types of processes. Regarding Mr. Wadman’s misunderstanding of the statement concerning the evaporation of solutions, I evidently failed to make the point clear in my first communication. As a specific illustration, assume a 34 per cent solution of caustic soda, boiling under atmospheric pressure a t 1 2 0 ” C. Mr. Wadman evidently understands that the vapor coming from such a solution is a t 100’C., but such is not the case. The vapor coming from a solution cannot possibly be a t a temperature other than that of the solution itself. It is true that in this case the vapor must cool to 100’before condensation will take place. Furthermore, if a thermometer be inserted into the vapor space, its cooling action will cause condensation of vapor upon it, and i t will therefore register 100’ until that condensation has been re-evaporated. The ‘vapor rising from the solution, being a t 1 2 0 ° , must be compressed isothermaZZy to 14 lbs. gauge in order to condense a t slightly above IZO”, its heat of condensation then being available for evaporation of more water from the original solution, The work consumption necessary t o remove I lb. of water from the 34 per cent solution of caustic soda is therefore

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I. (1545)(460 -I- 248)bn(14.7 I4)/ I8 1 4 . 7 = 40,600 foot-pounds of energy per pound of water

W = nRTlnp/p,

=

Wol. 8 , No. 9

evaporated. The process involved is truly isothermal throughout-solution, vapor, and condensed steam being a t all times a t 120’. W. K. LGWIS MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY CAMBRIDGE, August 17, 1916

SIR WILLIAM RAMSAY Editor of the Journal of Industrial and Engzneering Chemistry: In the death notice of Sir William Ramsay, in your August issue, the fact is omitted that he studied for some time under Prof. Rudolph Fittig, in Tuebingen, where he also acquired his degree of Dr. Sci. Nat. He came to Tuebingen while Ira Reinsen was there and he told me that he tried to enter the laboratory through a door seldom used, which was locked; after considerable knocking Remsen opened the door and promptly answered Kamsay’s question in broken German, in English. PITTSBURGH, PA. K. F. STAHL August 23. 1916

ANILJNE OIL POISONING Editor of the Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry: A letter in THISJ O ~ R S A L ,8 (1916), 573, written by Messrs. Fiske and Green on the subject of aniline poisoning, has come to my notice and I commend it to the careful consideration of all manufacturers and users of aniline oil. It is with the hope that I may add a few details thereto, that I am writing this. Soon after the outbreak of hostilities, this company realized that it could no longer depend upon overseas sources for its aniline and by h-ovember I , 1914, we were manufacturing aniline in large quantities; since that date the plant under the writer’s supervision has produced approximately 1500 tons without a single fatality due to aniline poisoning; our good fortune has not been a matter of pure luck but is the result of a persistent campaign to eliminate every possible source of danger and to care promptly for such cases of poisoning as have actually resulted. The premonitory symptoms of aniline poisoning are as described by Fiske and Green, the severe cases showing dizziness, unsteadiness on the feet and finally unconsciousness; however, men who are working constantly in the plant and who have, in a measure, become immune to the effect of aniline vapor, show bluish lips and skin; the poisoning does not seem to go beyond that stage and the men are not inconvenienced in any way; it has been our experience that the severest cases, those most prompt in making themselves manifest, have resulted from the spilling of aniline, nitrobenzol, or aniline hydrochloride liquor directly ’upon the skin and on this point we seem to be a t variance with Fiske and Green. Realizing that poisoning may be caused either by inhalation of rapor or direct contact with liquid, our manufacturing precautions have been based upon these two points; the building is provided with suction ventilating fans in the roof; several 24in. fans located in the exterior sidewall of the building play streams of air directly upon the men while they are a t their operating positions; in clement weather the windows are removed, a t other times satisfactory floor ventilation is provided; suction ventilating ducts are led directly to stuffing boxes and iron-boring feeders where there is always more or less escape vapor; the manufacturing system i s closed so that a t no point is it necessary for a man to handle open aniline; drinking men are excluded from the operating force; regular rations of milk are issued and their consumption insisted upon; showers are provided and a daily bath is compulsory; the company provides two clean working uniforms weekly per man; rubber boots are supplied; pumps, valves, stuffing boxes, etc., are inspected frequently and all leaks taken care of a t once.