Adsorption is one of the major chemical engineering unit operations, primarily used as an alternative to distillation when the substances involved do not have a significant difference in boiling points. When a specification requires low ppm concentration in the product, adsorption is usually appropriate.
The basic process involves an on-line process feed to a solid adsorbent which can selectively adsorb chemical species from a liquid or gas based on surface tension differences, dialectrics, and pore size. As with equilibrium stages, liquid concentration and component gas partial pressures supply the driving force. For kinetic separation the relative rate of adsorption becomes the primary separation parameter, and diffusion becomes important.
An adsorption bed becomes saturated with adsorbate and requires regeneration to the original adsorption capacity. This regeneration in whatever form requires changing the direction of equilibrium movement. This can be done by lowering partial pressure using vacuum or pressure reduction, which will create lower adsorption equilibrium capacity. This can be quantified easily by looking at equilibrium curves that relate partial pressure to adsorption capacity at different temperatures.
Thermal regeneration can use the stripping action of a hot gas to supply the heat of de-sorption and a lower partial pressure for the adsorbate to move.