Scrubber Design & Sizing Calculator | GrowMechanical

Scrubber Design & Sizing Calculator | GrowMechanical

Scrubber Design & Sizing Calculator

Empowering Process, Mechanical & Chemical Engineers
Nm³/h
Basis: 0°C & 101.325 kPa
m³/h
%
Used for NTU via HTU–NTU
°C
kPa
m/s
Typical 1.5–3.0 m/s for random packing
kg/m³
mPa·s
Enter mPa·s (1 mPa·s = 0.001 Pa·s)
kg/m³
mN/m
For F-factor guideline
m
e.g., 1" random ≈ 0.025 m
m
Used to compute ΔP
m
Typical 0.6–1.5 m (packing/solvent)
(Pa)0.5
Operate ≤ 70–80% of limit
m/s²

Results (SI)

Actual Gas Flow (Q)
Liquid Flow (QL)
Mass L/G (kg/kg)
Column Diameter (D)
Superficial vs
Gas Reynolds (Re)
ΔP per meter
Bed ΔP (for Hguess)
Pump TDH (est.)
NTU (from η)
Packing Height (HTU×NTU)
F-factor (utilization)
Notes: Q (actual) via ideal gas (T,P). ΔP from Ergun-style gas flow in packed bed. Height = HTU × NTU where NTU ≈ −ln(1−η). TDH ≈ static (H) + ΔP/ρLg (excludes piping losses).
🔰 Beginner Guide — How to use this scrubber calculator

Step 1 Enter your gas flow at normal conditions (Nm³/h). Set actual T (°C) and P (kPa). The tool converts to actual m³/s.

Step 2 Provide liquid flow (m³/h), fluid densities, and gas viscosity. If unsure, keep water at 1000 kg/m³.

Step 3 Choose a design superficial velocity (1.5–3.0 m/s is a common start). The calculator sizes the column diameter.

Step 4 Select packing size and void fraction. For 1″ random packing, dp≈0.025 m, ε≈0.90.

Step 5 Set target removal efficiency (η). Height is computed as HTU × NTU with NTU=−ln(1−η).

Step 6 Check F-factor utilization < 80% of the limit to avoid flooding.

Tip: If F-factor utilization is high, reduce vs, choose larger column diameter, or pick packing with higher capacity.
🎯 Accuracy & Design Notes — Assumptions, limits & when to refine
  • Flow conversion: Ideal-gas basis from Nm³/h → actual m³/s. For high-pressure or heavy gases, use real-gas (Z-factor) for tighter accuracy.
  • Pressure drop: Ergun-style correlation assumes dry gas through packing. Wet pressure drop is typically higher; confirm with vendor curves.
  • HTU values: The default HTU is a placeholder. Use pilot data or vendor guidance for the solvent/packing system to set realistic HTU.
  • L/G: Computed as mass ratio (kg/kg). Real designs balance mass transfer, hydraulics, and solvent economics—tune against process targets.
  • TDH: We estimate static head (≈ height) + ΔP/ρg and add a small margin. Include piping, fittings, and elevation losses in detailed design.
  • Safety margins: Keep operation at ~70–80% of the F-factor limit for stable operation and to account for fouling/foaming.
  • Scale-up: Before procurement, reconcile with vendor datasheets for packing type/size, liquid distributors, and demister selection.
🧪 Advanced — HTU–NTU, mass transfer & flooding checks
  • NTU from removal: For a dilute component with linear driving force, NTU ≈ −ln(1−η). For non-linear isotherms or rich/lean ends, integrate stage-wise or use rate-based simulation.
  • HTU sources: Estimate from literature/vendor data as a function of L/G, packing type, fluid properties. For structured packing, HTU often decreases with liquid load to a minimum, then rises.
  • Flooding/capacity: A Leva-type capacity model or vendor charts can predict vs,max. Operate at 70–80% of capacity. (Ask us if you want an auto-selector for vs from % of flooding.)
  • Wet pressure drop: Add a correction for liquid holdup. Vendor correlations (e.g., for Pall rings/IMTP/structured packing) are recommended for final numbers.
  • Mass transfer enhancement: Lower surface tension increases wetting; surfactants change hydrodynamics. Re-validate HTU if σ deviates strongly from water.
  • Demister selection: Check gas outlet velocity to size a mesh pad or vane pack; target < design mist carryover. Pressure drop across demister is additional.
❓ FAQ — Short answers engineers actually need
  • What’s a good starting vs? 1.5–3.0 m/s for random packing; structured packings can allow slightly higher for the same flood margin.
  • How do I reduce ΔP? Increase column diameter (lower vs), choose larger packing size (↑ε, ↑dp), or switch to structured packing.
  • Does η=99% explode height? Yes—NTU rises sharply as η→1. Balance removal spec with solvent rate and packing selection.
  • Do I need Z-factor? If P is high (>~300 kPa) or gas is non-ideal, yes—update Q conversion and density accordingly.
🔗 Related Tools & Internal Links (GrowMechanical)

These internal links strengthen topic clusters for SEO and help users move from sizing to hydraulics and equipment selection.

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