QUOTE (Graduate process ENG @ Aug 23 2008, 11:59 AM)

QUOTE (Zauberberg @ Aug 23 2008, 04:06 AM)

Flash gas is saturated with water (it leaves the vessel as such), and in these conditions cannot be used for water removal from lean TEG.
I am speaking about the most common stripping gas applications where targeted TEG purity is 99.9% or more, and I believe that was your question about. Introducing wet gas (which is in equilibrium with water) as stripping medium can only make things worse.
Zauberberg,
I don't know how I missed this , thanks for replay .
hi Z,
as a general concept where regeneration is meant to remove water, adding water in the saturated gas in the form of stripping gas may look as a bad idea.
however, remembering that the overall heat load of the regeneration system could be about vaporising say 200 kg/hr of water (a rough number) adding a strip gas containing 2 kg of water shall not have an adverse impact,
also the other components are still there C1 to C3 which are essentially effective in reducing the partial pressure.
yes i understand that a drygas / n2 will be more effective. but if the flash gases are going as waste, better to use it.
regards
neelakantan