beerwiz
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Vac Distillation of Water keeps stalling? Too high vacuum?
I'm using a 10 micron rotary vane pump 6CFM to vac distill water on a 2L rotavap.
At the start after turning the vac pump on I can see it boiling, then a minute later, no more boiling is seen and it sort of stalls, 2 hours into it
and only about 30ml distills off out of 600ml. There are no leaks in the system, the bath temp is 45C, and the rotavap is at 120rpm. The condenser is
at -50C.
Could the vacuum pump be pulling too strong of a vacuum and stalling the distillation?
Is there something I'm missing when doing vac distillations?
HEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEELPPPPPPP!
[Edited on 21-9-2018 by beerwiz]
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JJay
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If you put your finger over the exhaust of your vacuum pump, does pressure build up?
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beerwiz
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I haven't put my finger over it but I can see a lot of oil vapor coming out so I assume it does build up pressure at the exhaust port.
I did however put my finger on the addition port of the rotavap with the vac pump running and I could definitely feel the vacuum.
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JJay
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If you see a lot of oil vapor coming out, I practically guarantee that there's a leak somewhere.
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beerwiz
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When there's a leak there's the tell tale noise coming from the pump, it becomes louder, but when it's completely leak free, it runs with a humming
sound. When I do the distillation it has the noise in the beginning while evacuating the air then it goes to a humming sound meaning there's no leak.
I have to admit, the first time I used the pump I put sulfuric acid into it (since the oil bottle and the sulfuric acid bottle was very similar and I
didn't read the label) by accident instead of the oil. I'm not kidding, I immediately drained it out and put in the regular oil, but maybe this messed
it up a little bit? I doubt it since my other vac pump also has the same problem of stalling the distillation of water.
edit: I have a gut feeling the culprit may be the oil I'm using. I normally use 10W-30 motor oil, but this time I used the oil from the pump
manufacturer. I'll try plain old mineral oil next, I hope this solves the problem.
[Edited on 21-9-2018 by beerwiz]
[Edited on 21-9-2018 by beerwiz]
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Sidmadra
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You put sulfuric acid in it..? Was it concentrated? That's sketchy. Even if you drained it and put in new oil, there's almost certainly still sulfuric
acid in there. Depending on the pump material, I think it is very very likely sulfuric acid could have corroded something in there. You would have to
wash out the the vacuum pump like 3x with new oil to get all the sulfuric acid out...
But if you put concentrated sulfuric acid in there, then I think there's a very strong possibility your vacuum is toast. Vane pumps
require tight contact between the metal surfaces to pull vacuum, and sulfuric acid would corrode even steel pretty quickly.
You can easily test if your vacuum pump is pulling a vacuum by turning it on and putting your hand over the hose, feeling the suction. Also, if a
vacuum is being pulled, you will find it nearly impossible to pull your rotovap flasks off, because the vacuum sucks them on.
[Edited on 21-9-2018 by Sidmadra]
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Magpie
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No.
Place a vacuum gauge or manometer on your system. You have lost vacuum for some reason.
The single most important condition for a successful synthesis is good mixing - Nicodem
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happyfooddance
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If your condenser is -50°C your water will be collecting there, as ice.
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beerwiz
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It was 98% sulfuric acid, I know it's crazy but it's true, mistakes happen.
So my question is how do I quickly distill water under vacuum? 15ml/hour seems to be way too slow or is this the norm for water?
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Deathunter88
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Quote: Originally posted by beerwiz | It was 98% sulfuric acid, I know it's crazy but it's true, mistakes happen.
So my question is how do I quickly distill water under vacuum? 15ml/hour seems to be way too slow or is this the norm for water?
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Get a vacuum gauge and check the pressure of the system. If the pump isn't pulling a good vacuum then you broke it, so go get a new pump.
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Swinfi2
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This is a funny coincide (not the pump thing, ouch) I've been thinking about distilled water for a while and just come up with this.
Obvious it doesn't go as quick as a vacuum system but the idea is to run it (99%) unattended. Just doing the first run now to make sure its safe to
leave.
As for your issue could it be that the poor vacuum and low bath temp causes the water to cool below it's boiling point? 45 seems low to me. But then
my best vacuum is an aspirator so it's relative.
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