How can I remove steam from exhaust gases?

In summary: H2O in the water gas mixture, the H2O will be forced out of the mixture by the pressure of the CO2.If you make it this way, the carbon will be used up, but carbon in the form of coke (not the soft-drink, it's the stuff used to smelt iron in a blast furnace) is a plentiful (and I think cheap) ingredient.
  • #1
physior
182
1
hello

I have hot gases with steam (water) inside
how do I separate it ?

without cooling it

magnetic field can help?
ultrasound?
something else?
thanks!
 
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  • #2
What kind of gas is mixed with the steam and why can't we cool it?
 
  • #3
exhaust gas from internal combustion engine
I want it as hot as possible to react with the catalyst
at the same time I want it without water/steam
 
  • #4
It's not clear what sort of reaction you want to accomplish with the help of the catalyst.

BTW, automobiles equipped with catalytic converters as pollution controls work just fine without removing water vapor from the exhaust stream before it enters the converter.
 
  • #5
I don't think theirs another way except condensation or find a membrane or chem that's hydrophilic, maybe pressure.
 
  • #6
You've made contradictory statements

do you want to separate water from steam as in title of thread

or do you want to separate H2O from another substance as inferred in posts 1 and 3 ?Removing water from steam is often done mechanically by abruptly changing its direction, look up "chevron steam dryer" .
Chemical separation is another story...
 
  • #7
SteamKing said:
It's not clear what sort of reaction you want to accomplish with the help of the catalyst.

BTW, automobiles equipped with catalytic converters as pollution controls work just fine without removing water vapor from the exhaust stream before it enters the converter.

the reaction that the catalytic converter does!

I know they work without having to remove the water vapor, but I would like to remove the water vapor!
 
  • #8
I want to remove H2O from exhaust gases, which H2O is obviously in the form of steam/vapor there!
 
  • #9
Can I ask why you want to do this?

Perhpas a desiccant would work.
 
  • #10
I want to do it as a project
to dehydrate exhaust gases of internal combustion engines
 
Last edited:
  • #11
desiccant is not sustainable, I need a way that is sustainable
 
  • #12
why can't I take advantage of this phenomenon:


to separate all the water molecules from the exhaust gases?
 
  • #13
I'm not a combustion expert, but that's only good if all the exhaust molecules are non-polar except the water. Plus, do you really need the steam separated badly enough to create a static E field inside your exhaust pipe?
 
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  • #14
it's an experiment, it's not going to an actual car

is the video I posted amazing?

did you know that?

I didn't, although I was expecting it

the question is how much forcefield I need, to grab molecules and accelerate them?
 
  • #15
physior said:
I want to do it as a project
to dehydrate exhaust gases of internal combustion engines
Isn't your teacher/professor going to ask why?
desiccant is not sustainable, I need a way that is sustainable
What do you mean by "sustainable"?
why can't I take advantage of this phenomenon:
I'm not sure how you would actually utilize that.
 
  • #16
Usually one would remove water droplets from wet steam mechanically, through steam dryers.

However, since the water vapor (steam) is intimately mixed with CO2, CO, NOx, SOx, one would have to remove it via a dessicant as Russ indicated, or centrifugally (separation of molecular mass variation), which would require a lot of power (energy) and would probably penalize the IC power generation.

Fossil fuel power plants use scrubbers to preferentially remove pollutants. Steam (water vapor) is usually considered acceptable to release into the atmosphere.
 
  • #17
physior said:
is the video I posted amazing?

You can do the same thing with a plastic comb you run through your hair or a balloon your rub on your head.
 
  • #18
Right after the catalytic converter, the exhaust gas temperature drops significantly even if there is still some exothermic reaction from CO and HC oxidation. Once the exhaust gas passes the catalytic converter, you can use a low temperature heat exchanger to bring the exhaust gas below 100C though you may want even lower than 100C.

In internal or external combustion engines equipped with water injection, it is good to recover the spent water and filter it before it goes back into the engine. Message me separately if you want to discuss this further outside the forum
 
  • #19
according to me drier will be the best option
 
  • #20
Look up Water Gas and the Water Gas Shift Reaction. 'Water gas' is a mixture of CO and H2 made simply by passing high-temperature steam over red-hot carbon. If you make it this way, the carbon will be used up, but carbon in the form of coke (not the soft-drink, it's the stuff used to smelt iron in a blast furnace) is a plentiful (and I think cheap) ingredient. Perhaps there is some spot in the exhaust stream that is hot enough. The idea is that the CO and H2 can be then oxidised by a suitable catalyst, perhaps in the cat converter itself. This latter reaction should be exothermic, which might be used to supply heat to the water gas generator(?).

The water gas shift reaction is this reaction: CO +H2O = CO2 + H2. The CO is oxidised to CO2 and the H2O is reduced to H2. Since you have both CO and H2O in your exhaust stream, the reaction should be a no-brainer. The fact that the water somehow escapes reacting with carbon monoxide in the internal combustion exhaust stream suggests to me that a catalyst will be needed to promote the reaction. Perhaps this needs to be something different than the PGMs in the standard cat converter. You'll have to look it up yourself. I'm no chemical engineer. But this solution meets the difficult requirements of sustainability and no low T condensation. In theory at least.
 
  • #21
P.S. To my previous reply:
I looked up the shift reaction in Wikipedia and learned that the equilibrium constant has a negative response to temperature. At T>1000K, it's ≤1. On the other hand, the products are swept away by the pressure gradient in the pipe, so the reaction will be 'pulled' toward the products, i.e. it can achieve some sort of steady-state over the catalyst (I think). The catalyst is a mixture of Fe2O3, Cr2O3 and a pinch of MgO, all very common and cheap ingredients.
 
  • #22
Mark for water to be converted to H2, you will need a lot of energy. Exothermic reaction at the catalytic converter is far from enough or it will sinter the precious metal the the monolith.

Bear in mind also, in a complete combustion, water is just a small percentage if compared to the CO2 and unreacted N2.
 
  • #23
azmio said:
Bear in mind also, in a complete combustion, water is just a small percentage if compared to the CO2 and unreacted N2.
In complete combustion, water is one of the primary components of the exhaust stream. What it lacks, though, is a significant amount of CO.
 
  • #24
russ_watters said:
In complete combustion, water is one of the primary components of the exhaust stream. What it lacks, though, is a significant amount of CO.
You can get enough co by injecting rich upstream. Still if you have lots of nitrogen in the exhaust stream the conversion efficiency will drop. Frankly, just cool off the exhaust gas stream after the catalyst is a much simpler option. I have published papers on this
 
  • #25
Unfortunately, a chevron steam dryer removes water condensate from the steam flow but does not remove steam.

When you consider the products of the combustion of hydrocarbons in air you get predominantly N2, H2O and CO2. The molecular weights are H2O=18, N2=28 and CO2=44.

If you then use a bank of gas centrifuges you will be able to separate those three gasses.

A fast cyclonic separator would create a lower pressure at the centre, that would result in local condensation of the water component along the axis. The density of that water as a condensate would then be higher than all the gasses involved and so it would be thrown back out to the higher PT region where it would go back into solution. It might be possible to intercept and collect that liquid water condensate as it departs the central axis to move outwards. That could be an application for a chevron steam drier.
 
  • #26
there shouldn't be complicated structure integrated to the exhaust pipe. It will self destruct during 1000 hours WOT durability test.

The heat exchanger should be integrated to the end portion of the exhaust pipe. In particulate, the tailpipe outlet should be placed as high as possible to make it difficult for condensed water to fight the gravity. If we manage to bring down the exhaust gas to around 60-70C, there will be plenty of water to collect at the bottom surface of the exhaust pipe.
 
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  • #27
azmio said:
If we manage to bring down the exhaust gas to around 60-70C, there will be plenty of water to collect at the bottom surface of the exhaust pipe.

Although I think this is a totally reasonable and effective solution, the OP asked about separation without cooling.
 
  • #28
timethereaper,

At the same time, the op also mentioned that he wants it hot because the exhaust gas need be treated by the catalytic converter. Catalyst will still work with large amount of water in the exhaust gas stream. I also wrote that a better way will be to treat it first before separating the water by cooling the exhaust gas.
 
  • #29
Maybe I'm off base here, but I feel like this would require a two pronged attack focusing on both the intake/fuel delivery as well as scrubbing the exhaust output.

On the intake side of things, I feel like you'd want to prevent H2O from getting created in the first place by reducing the amount of hydrogen that is able to make its way into the combustion chamber. Off the top of my sleep-deprived head you might accomplish this by scrubbing the intake air with some sort of desiccant canister/filter and replacing as much of the hydrocarbon-based fuel being burned as possible with N 2O.

On the exhaust side, a second inline desiccant canister leading into the catalytic converter could wick out more moisture before the catalytic reaction occurs.

I know you're looking for some sort of daily-driver friendly solution, but I can't currently conceive of any permanent fixture that could remove all water from the waste gases of an engine all the time... let alone one that wouldn't create all sorts of back pressure and airflow constrictions. I would think that playing with desiccants and fuel mixtures would suffice if you're simply looking for some experimental emissions data by controlling variables in the gases hitting the catalyzing agent.

Another purely experimental route you might consider would be to somehow capture your exhaust gases (air compressor in a controlled environment?) then once cooled and dehydrated, expel the gasses through a heated pipe or radiator (to get them back to exhaust temperatures) and into a catalytic converter on your test bench for data collection.
 
  • #30
physior said:
exhaust gas from internal combustion engine
I want it as hot as possible to react with the catalyst
at the same time I want it without water/steam

Physior,
Have you made any progress on this problem? The chevron dryer system removes liquid water from steam, and I thought you wanted to remove all water including the gaseous form. Otherwise, in my judgement, none of the posed solutions met all your specifications. I was wondering what your thoughts are at this point. If you have relaxed your requirements, then perhaps we may still be able to help.

The idea I still favor is removing the steam through some sort of reforming reaction. My thoughts are to use the water gas methods. The water gas shift method uses a catalyst to reduce the water vapor with the CO it contains; or you can put carbon in the vapor stream, which would then reduce all the vapor to CO and H2. But as others pointed out, the former fails to remove ALL the water, and the latter requires addition of an external ingredient (the C) which must be replenished from time to time.

Please respond.
 

Related to How can I remove steam from exhaust gases?

1. How does steam get into exhaust gases?

Steam is a byproduct of combustion in engines. When fuel is burned, water vapor is released as a result of the chemical reaction. This water vapor then mixes with the exhaust gases and is expelled through the exhaust system.

2. Why is it important to remove steam from exhaust gases?

Steam can decrease the efficiency of an engine and can also cause damage to the exhaust system. It can also contribute to air pollution and negatively impact the environment. Therefore, it is important to remove steam from exhaust gases for both performance and environmental reasons.

3. What methods are used to remove steam from exhaust gases?

There are several methods that can be used to remove steam from exhaust gases. One common method is to use a condenser, which cools the exhaust gases and turns the steam back into liquid water. Another method is to use a scrubber, which uses a chemical solution to absorb the steam. Additionally, some engines have built-in systems that help to remove steam from the exhaust gases.

4. Can removing steam from exhaust gases be harmful?

No, removing steam from exhaust gases is not harmful. In fact, it can improve the performance of an engine and reduce air pollution. However, it is important to ensure that the methods used to remove steam are done safely and do not cause harm to the environment.

5. Is it possible to completely remove all steam from exhaust gases?

While it is not possible to completely remove all steam from exhaust gases, it is possible to significantly reduce the amount of steam present. This can be achieved through proper maintenance of the engine and the use of effective steam removal methods. However, a small amount of steam may still be present in the exhaust gases due to the combustion process.

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