Absorption (chemistry)
In chemistry, absorption is a process by which a substance incorporated in one state is transferred into another substance of a different state (e.g., gases being absorbed by a liquid or liquids being absorbed by a solid). As an industrial process, the most commonly encountered use of absorption is for the separation and/or purification of a gas mixture by the absorption of part of the mixture in a solvent.
Types of absorption
Absorption may be either a physical or a chemical process:
Physical absorption of a gas or part of a gas mixture in a liquid solvent involves the mass transfer that occurs at the interface between the gas and the liquid and the rate at which the gas diffuses into the liquid.
- An example of physical absorption of a gas into a liquid is the absorption of ammonia (NH3) into water (H2). Another example is the separation of low molecular weight gases such as propane (C3H8) and butane (C4H10) from a hydrocarbon gas mixture of methane (CH4), ethane (C2H6), propane and butane by absorbing the propane and butane in a solvent that is a mixture of much higher molecular weight hydrocarbon liquids.
Chemical absorption or reactive absorption involves a chemical reaction between the substance being absorbed and the absorbing medium.
- An example of chemical absorption is the removal of acid gass