Maritimer wrote:What a wonderful library of distillation books you must have! I can see you in your ancient stone tower, surrounded by your distillation tomes propped on their slanted reading stands as you take notes with an electronic quill.
Uh, no, the only physical book I have on this subject is
A Short History of the Art of Distillation by R.J. Forbes and thats only because I could not locate a digitized copy. So no stone tower I'm afraid. I do like the idea

Sounds a lot better then a man's cave.
When I got interested in distillation I couldn't grok the concept of reflux. There was simply to much conflicting information. Some sources stated that you don't need reflux and that by making a column tall enough you can get perfect separation without reflux and that reflux was only necessary to limit the hight of a column to a more practical value. It seems like something magically was going on in the column especially in the bottom end. Based on the amount and concentration of the ethanol coming out from the top I (wrongly) concluded that, as it is impossible that more ethanol leaves the column than the amount that enters the column, the bottom had to receive much more vapor than the top was producing. So I asked myself why are all the columns straight and not made in the shape of a vuvuzela. So I started to look at all the columns and found this wonderful concept of the bubble ball which reinforced the delusion I had.
After a while I came so my senses.
Starting from scratch I concluded from the obvious assumption that no more ethanol could come out as there was put in, the function of the column was to prevent the water from reaching the top of the column. Reflux is a badly chosen name for a process of two partial interwoven cycles. Ethanol is falling as a liquid and water is rising as vapor. When they meet , the water evaporates the ethanol, condenses in the process and falls back to the boiler. The evaporated ethanol rises up to the condenser. So part of the ethanol vapor that is leaving the column is borrowed, and must be returned to complete the cycle. “
Ask not what you must leave behind, ask what you can take along” is the proper state of mind to understand this process. The ethanol we can take off is at most the ethanol that is evaporated in our boiler and fed into our column. We cannot turn water into ethanol, but with this trick we can block the water and retrieve the ethanol only.
So I think that you can start with a short wide column, than a condenser to block some of the water, continue with a thinner column, then again a condenser, and a even thinner column, etc. but this would be difficult to make. And that is the problem with all those beautiful different designs of plates:, helix, double helix, bubble caps in a spiral configuration, etc. There are expensive to make. And we now have SPP with a HETP of less then 3 cm. Or lava rock.