Abstract
The separation of the para and ortho isomers of xylene as well as the azeotropic mixture of butyl ether/o-xylene using carbon dioxide at high pressure was investigated. The phase behavior of carbon dioxide and each of these compounds along with the ternary systems; CO 2/p-xylene/o-xylene and CO 2/butyl ether/o-xylene were experimentally determined. The relative volatilities of p-xylene to o-xylene in the CO 2/p-xylene/o-xylene system compared favorably with those obtained in distillation. The results also indicated a substantial shift in the butyl ether/o-xylene azeotrope to higher butyl ether concentrations in the presence of carbon dioxide thus indicating a potential for the separation of these mixtures using carbon dioxide at low temperatures. Thermodynamic models using the Peng—Robinson equation of state were developed and better predictions of the bubble point pressures were obtained when the interaction parameter, δ ij , was allowed to vary with phase density. This approach results in an analytically solvable quartic equation in volume and gives different δ ij 's for the vapor and liquid phases. In this model, the temperature dependence of the binary interaction parameter is contained within its density dependence and, δ ij 's obtained from fitting VLE data at a single temperature could be used for accurate prediction of equilibrium data at other temperatures. The results of such predictions were better than predictions obtained by fitting the actual data using the conventional VDW-1 mixing rules.
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