Centrifugal extractor
A centrifugal extractor—also known as a centrifugal contactor or annular centrifugal contactor—uses the rotation of the rotor inside a centrifuge to mix two immiscible liquids outside the rotor and to separate the liquids in the field of gravity inside the rotor. This way, a centrifugal extractor generates a continuous extraction from one liquid phase into another liquid phase.
A summary of contactor design principles and applications is included in a recent compilation.
History
The first liquid-liquid centrifugal contactor was invented by Walter Podbielniak with the patent filed in 1932, then a series of developed models which were and continue to be used for whole variety of processes including solvent extraction of minerals and the purification of vegetable oils, but notably for the production of penicillin in World War II.It has been employed in solvent extraction processes for metals valuable to the nuclear industry, for example as part of the Salt Waste Processing Facility at the Savannah River Site for implementation of the CSSX process to extract radioactive caesium from tank wastes stored there.
Uses include recovery of valuable actinides in Spent Nuclear Fuel reprocessing, specifically the recovery of fissile material.
It is also used in the processing of Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment.
Monostage centrifugal extractor
Two immiscible liquids of different densities are fed to the separate inlets and are rapidly mixed in the annular space between the spinning rotor and stationary housing. The mixed phases are directed toward the center of the rotor by radial vanes in the housing base. As the liquids enter the central opening of the rotor, they are accelerated toward the wall. The mixed phases are rapidly accelerated to rotor speed and separation begins as the liquids are displaced upward. A system of weirs at the top of the rotor allow each phase to exit the rotor where it lands in a collector ring and exits the stage. Flow from between stages is by gravity with no need for inter-stage pumps. The centrifugal contactors thus acts as a mixer, centrifuge and pump. Centrifugal contactors are typical referred to by the diameter of their rotor. Thus, a 5-inch centrifugal contactor is one having a 5-inch diameter rotor.Annular centrifugal contactors are relatively low revolutions-per-minute, moderate gravity enhancing machines, and can therefore be powered by a direct drive, variable speed motor. Typical RPM for small units is approximately 3600RPM while larger units would operate at lower RPM depending on their size. The effectiveness of a centrifugal separation can be easily described as proportional to the product of the force exerted in multiples of gravity and the residence time in seconds or g-seconds. Achieving a particular g-seconds value in a liquid–liquid centrifuge can be obtained in two ways: increasing the multiples of gravity or increasing the residence time. Creating higher g-force values for a specific rotor diameter is a function of rpm only.
Multistage centrifugal extractor
The feed solution initially containing one or more solutes, and an immiscible solvent having a different density flow counter-currently through the extractor’s rotor, designed with a stack of mechanical subassemblies representing the required number of separate stages.The successive mixing and separation operations performed in each mechanical stage permit the mass transfer of the solutes from the feed solution to the solvent.