Liquid to Liquid Extraction

Liquid-Liquid Extraction (LLE) Systems

Liquid-Liquid Extraction (LLE) Systems

Liquid-liquid extraction (LLE), also called solvent extraction, is a separation process that transfers a target solute (or solutes) from one liquid phase (the feed or raffinate) into a second immiscible liquid phase (the solvent or extract). The two phases are mixed to allow mass transfer, then separated by gravity or centrifugal force. LLE is widely used when distillation is impractical due to close boiling points, azeotropes, heat sensitivity, or when high selectivity is needed. Common industries include petrochemicals, pharmaceuticals, hydrometallurgy, food processing, wastewater treatment, and fine chemicals.

Basic Principle & Driving Force

LLE relies on the difference in solubility of the target solute between two immiscible liquids (usually an aqueous phase and an organic solvent). The distribution coefficient (K or D) defines how favorably the solute partitions into the solvent phase:

Distribution Coefficient (K): K = Concentration in extract phase / Concentration in raffinate phase
Higher K → more efficient extraction.

Key factors affecting performance: solvent selection, pH, temperature, phase ratio, mixing intensity, and contact time.

Common Equipment Types

Type Description Typical Use
Mixer-Settler Separate mixing tank + settling tank per stage; gravity separation Large-scale, high flow, multi-stage extraction
Centrifugal Extractor (Podbielniak, Luwesta, etc.) High-speed rotating disc or bowl for rapid mixing & separation High throughput, short residence time, space-limited sites
Packed or Plate Column (Karr, Scheibel, Pulsed) Counter-current flow in vertical column with packing or plates High number of theoretical stages, continuous operation
Rotating Disc Contactor (RDC) Rotating discs enhance mixing in a column Moderate to high throughput, good for viscous phases
Agitated Column (Kühni, Oldshue-Rushton) Impellers on shaft provide mixing High dispersion, good for difficult phase separation
Feature Mixer-Settler Centrifugal Extractor Packed/Plate Column
Throughput High Very high Moderate to high
Number of Stages Flexible (multiple units) Limited per machine High (column height)
Footprint Large Very compact Compact (vertical)
Residence Time Long (settling) Very short Moderate
Best For Large scale, slow kinetics Heat-sensitive, high-value, space-limited High stage efficiency, continuous

Typical Operating Parameters

Parameter Typical Range Notes
Phase Ratio (O/A or A/O) 1:1 to 10:1 Depends on distribution coefficient & economics
Operating Temperature 20–80 °C Higher temp often increases solubility & kinetics
Residence Time 1–30 minutes per stage Shorter in centrifugal, longer in mixer-settler
Number of Stages 2–20 theoretical stages Determined by extraction factor & required recovery
Solvent Recovery 99%+ typical Via distillation, stripping, or back-extraction

Common Applications & Advantages

Industry / Application Typical Separation Primary Goal
Petrochemical Aromatics (benzene/toluene/xylene) from aliphatics High-purity product recovery
Pharmaceuticals Antibiotics, vitamins, APIs from fermentation broth Selective solute extraction, product concentration
Hydrometallurgy Copper, uranium, rare earths, cobalt/nickel from leach solutions Metal recovery & concentration
Food & Beverage Caffeine from coffee/tea, essential oils, decaffeination Natural product extraction
Wastewater / Environmental Phenols, organic acids, heavy metals from aqueous waste Pollutant removal, solvent recovery

Key Advantages of Liquid-Liquid Extraction Systems

  • High selectivity — separates compounds with similar boiling points
  • Operates at ambient/low temperature — ideal for heat-sensitive materials
  • Scalable from lab to large industrial scale
  • Effective for dilute solutions — concentrates solute
  • Can handle azeotropic or close-boiling mixtures
  • Continuous operation possible in column or centrifugal systems

SRS International

Also check out, "Oil Extraction System"

Need More Help ? Contact Us