Liquid–Liquid Extraction

Application ID: 114131


Liquid-liquid extraction is a process used to separate or transfer species between two immiscible liquids. Transfer of species from one phase to the other is driven by a difference in relative solubility. In this model a water filled extraction column is studied. Oil droplets containing a solute species are injected at the bottom of the column and rises up due buoyancy. As the oil droplets rise, the solute species is transferred into the aqueous phase. Water is injected at the top of the column. The column is fitted with a number of alternating horizontal discs in order to increase the residence time of the oil droplets.

The model is built using the Dispersed Two-Phase Flow with Species Transport multiphysics interface. The Mixture Model is used to compute the two-phase flow, where the k-omega model is used to account for the turbulent flow from the rising droplets. The species transport is solved for both in the continuous (water) phase and in the dispersed phase (oil droplets). Solute extraction is modeled using the Dispersed Two-Phase Flow, Diluted Species multiphysics feature.

This model example illustrates applications of this type that would nominally be built using the following products: