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      INDUSTRIAL CRYSTALLIZATION AND PRECIPITATION FROM SOLUTIONS: STATE OF THE TECHNIQUE

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          Abstract

          Crystallization and precipitation from solutions are responsible for 70% of all solid materials produced by the chemical industry. Competing with distillation as a separation and purification technique, their use is widespread. They operate at low temperatures with low energy consumption and yield with high purifications in one single step. Operational conditions largely determine product quality in terms of purity, filterability, flowability and reactivity. Producing a material with the desired quality often requires a sound knowledge of the elementary steps involved in the process: creation of supersaturation, nucleation, crystal growth, aggregation and other secondary processes. Mathematical models coupling these elementary processes to all particles in a crystallizer have been developed to design and optimize crystallizer operation. For precipitation, the spatial distribution of reactants and particles in the reactor is important; thus the tools of computational fluid dynamics are becoming increasingly important. For crystallization of organic chemicals, where incorporation of impurities and crystal shape are critical, molecular modeling has recently appeared as a useful tool. These theoretical developments must be coupled to experimental data specific to each material. Theories and experimental techniques of industrial crystallization and precipitation from solutions are reviewed, and recent developments are highlighted.

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          Electrolyte crystal growth mechanisms

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            Interfacial tensions electrolyte crystal-aqueous solution, from nucleation data

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              Crystallization Technology Handbook

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                bjce
                Brazilian Journal of Chemical Engineering
                Braz. J. Chem. Eng.
                Brazilian Society of Chemical Engineering (São Paulo )
                0104-6632
                December 2001
                : 18
                : 4
                : 423-440
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Instituto de Pesquisas Tecnológicas do Estado de São Paulo Brazil
                [2 ] Universidade Federal de São Carlos Brazil
                [3 ] Delft University of Technology The Netherlands
                [4 ] Escola de Engenharia Mauá Brazil
                Article
                S0104-66322001000400007
                10.1590/S0104-66322001000400007
                a7439b26-90c1-4db6-a6de-11231b516082

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0104-6632&lng=en
                Categories
                ENGINEERING, CHEMICAL

                General engineering
                Crystallization,precipitation,computational fluid dynamics
                General engineering
                Crystallization, precipitation, computational fluid dynamics

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