This is a distillation column that doesn't have a continuous feed. The material that is to be distilled will typically be in a round bottom still at the end of the column.
The two most elementary forms of distillation are a continuous http://www.answers.com/topic/equilibrium-flash-vaporization and a simple http://www.answers.com/topic/batch-distillation. In a continuous equilibrium distillation, a continuously flowing liquid feed is heated or reduced in pressure (flashed) so as to cause partial vaporization. The vapor and liquid disengage while flowing through an open drum, and the products emerge as vapor and liquid streams. The vapor product can be condensed to form a liquid distillate. It is also possible to use a vapor feed, subjected to cooling and thereby http://www.answers.com/topic/partial-condensation, again followed by http://www.answers.com/topic/disengagement of the resultant vapor and liquid in an open drum. In a simple batch distillation, an entire batch of liquid is initially charged to a vessel and is then heated, typically by http://www.answers.com/topic/condensation of steam inside a metal http://www.answers.com/topic/coil within the vessel. Vapor is thereby continuously generated, and may be condensed to form a liquid distillate, which is collected. In the batch distillation, increments of vapor are formed in equilibrium with all liquid compositions ranging from the original to the final, whereas the continuous equilibrium distillation gives vapor in equilibrium with only the final liquid composition. Since the distillate consists primarily of the more volatile components and the feed liquid contains more of these substances than does the final liquid, the simple batch distillation gives a more http://www.answers.com/topic/enrichment distillate than does the continuous equilibrium distillation.
Semi batch reactor is the one in which one reactant is charged before the reaction and the other is continously added as the reaction proceed.
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Economic Continuous Rating (ECR)
There is no fed batch continuous reactor as far as i know. But there are batch, fed-batch and continuous type reactors. Basically a batch reactor is one in which you fill up all the things and lock it down for fermentation while in a fed batch you keep putting the feed in and allow cells to grow as much as possible or until you reach the capacity of the reactor where as in a continuous reactor you keep feeding in and taking out the product continuously that is why continuous type reactors run for long time like weeks or months.
sponge iron production is continuous process sponge iron production is continuous process
This is a distillation column that doesn't have a continuous feed. The material that is to be distilled will typically be in a round bottom still at the end of the column.
Springer Link offers several journals on batch and continuous culture. Thee journals begin with the article titled "Growth of Nitrosomonas europaea in batch and in continuous culture."
It's both.
It replaced the slower batch digesting process
If you think of baking cookies it is rather simple. When you make a batch of cookies, you usually make and bake many cookies at a time, which like it sounds is a batch process. A continuous process would be making and baking one cookie at a time.
You didn't give a context, but in an application like credit card processing a batch process collects a number of transactions into a batch and then sends them all at once at a predetermined time or as part of a manual process. A continuous process would process the cards as they were presented. In reality there is a mix in CC processing where a quick check is made on validity of card when presented and complete processing in a batch. In some transmission applications data is first collected and then "burst" out at a later time or after all the data is collected. This is analogous to a batch transmission.
An incinerator is what things are burned in.
You can grow Penicillum notatum by using a batch or continuous fermentor.
Depends on the product. Both can be profitable. If volume is high and the product is standard, than, the continuous production is a better fit. If the product need flexibility and less volume, the batch production is more suitable.
Yes it is as there is no break in the output as you would have with a batch process.