Hi Lurch,
Note that filtration generally means particulates are removed from a fluid stream by mechanically blocking their travel, generally through the use of an element with small enough openings to capture particles. Purification generally means the fluid stream is subjected to various other non-mechanical means, for example: cryogenically freezing out a contaminant or creating some kind of chemical interaction to remove the contaminant.
In the classroom, our instructor has been sayiong that the main device for purifying a fluid should not be a filter, but the resevoir. Do you agree with this premise (in general terms, of course)?
I wouldn't entirely disagree, but the way this is presented makes it sounds as if a reservoir is intended for use as a particulate separator. I've seen hydraulic reservoirs provided with internal filters, such that the 'filter body' if you will, is actually the reservoir. Perhaps that's what your instructor is thinking.
In general, reservoirs of any kind, be it for a hydraulic system or a chemical process tank, are not suitable for separating contaminants for a number of reasons.
1. They may be inaccessible for cleaning on a regular basis.
2. To clean them would require the system be shut down.
3. The cost of cleaning the reservoir would be prohibitive.
It's possible to use a reservoir as a contaminant separator, and in a sense they are used as such, but if they are they're generally not considered reservoirs. In fact, tanks that store fluids of any kind are places where contaminants often are concentrated (as your instructor points out) and any portion of the system downstream will often need to be protected by placing a filter on the outlet.
And is there any way you could alter the pressure or temperature of the Ethylene so as to allow the contaminants to precipitate out?
There are a lot of ways to remove contaminants, but from the description of the system above, it sounds like a simple filter element is the most economical way to go unless the particles are too small. That's a very real possibility. A molecular sieve is another common filtration means for removing the very fine particles such as carbon or piston ring dust. I don't see any way of altering pressure/temperature in this case though. Doing that isn't impossible but it wouldn't be economical.