Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Process Wednesday: maximum stirrable volume

What is the maximum stirrable
volume of a beer stein?
Photo credit: thenibble.com
Continuing with Kilomentor's comments on reactor volume, he comments on maximum stirrable volume:
In order to minimize the number of vessels used in a step, the workup of a reaction is preferably conducted in the reactor vessel. In order to calculate the highest possible kilograms of intermediate product that can be produced in a particular reactor in a single run one needs to first determine what point in the protocol requires the largest stirred volume. Then the protocol is rescaled so that at that point this volume is equal to the maximum stirrable volume of the particular reactor. For example, suppose the protocol you are going to follow will produce 45 grams of purified product and at the point of maximum volume in this procedure the combined organic and aqueous solutions are 500 mL. if the maximum stirrable volume for the reactor you propose using in production is 2200 litres then the maximum throughput per run will be (2200/500) X 45 = 198 kg. Now if the target of your project will require you to make 450 kg of this intermediate, you will need at least three runs of this step because the maximum amount two runs can give is 396 kg. 
Now if you could modify the protocol so that at the point of maximum volume the volume were only 440 litres, you could make the 450 kg of material in just 2 runs. Providing a margin of safety against shortfalls by planning for 3 runs may be the wisest course of action.
As opposed to minimum stirrable volume, this is a concept that applies to lab-scale chemistry. Ever been working up a reaction in a 500 mL flask and found that you need to add 1 L of water to quench?

When you're planning a reaction for the first time, it's not a terrible idea to add up all the volume you're adding to a reaction and see if you're going to exceed the maximum stirrable volume of your flask -- it might save you some time.  

1 comment:

  1. Young chemists should also take note of the maximum EVAPORABLE volume before they tie down a rotavap for an hour because they have to clean their material out of the joint and condenser.

    I imagine bumping can be an issue in reactors as well when a distillation is needed, but since the surface volume doesn't change in a cylindrical container, I suppose there's no parallel.

    ReplyDelete

looks like Blogger doesn't work with anonymous comments from Chrome browsers at the moment - works in Microsoft Edge, or from Chrome with a Blogger account - sorry! CJ 3/21/20