Introduction To Chemical Reaction Engineering: General Mole Balance For Ideal Reactors
Introduction To Chemical Reaction Engineering: General Mole Balance For Ideal Reactors
Lecture 2 Plan
General mole balance equation for ideal reactors Assumptions used in ideal reactors Design equations for ideal reactors
Learning outcomes: Describe the assumptions used in ideal reactors Derive the general mole balance equation Apply the general mole balance equation to the 3 most common types of reactor
Rate of Rate of generation Rate of Rate of flow of j in flow of j out + of j by chemical = accumulation of j (moles/time) (moles/time) reaction (moles/time) (moles/time)
nj0 nj + Gj =
dN j dt
If all the system variables (e.g. temperature, concentration) are spatially uniform throughout the volume then G is the product of reaction volume, V, and the rate of formation of j, rj: Gj = rjV
Determine the time (batch) or reactor volume (flow reactor) to convert a specified amount of reactants into products.
nj0 V
nj
Reaction rate
Reaction rate, rj: moles of j appearing (or formed) because of the reaction per unit volume of reacting mixture per unit time (molj/m3 s) If j is reacting (disappearing), rate is ve (i.e. = -rj) If j is product (appearing), rate is +ve (i.e. = rj)
k1C A rA = 1+ k 2C A
The concentration dependence must be determined from experimental observation
Batch Reactors
Assume: Well-mixed Often assume constant V and
V
NA moles of A
Batch Reactors
No inflow or outflow
nj0
nj
r jV =
For constant V
dN j dt
1 dN j rj = V dt
d (N j /V ) dt
dC j dt
Consider
NA0
NB NA NA1 NB1
t1
t1
Mole-time trajectories
dN A rAV = dt
Rearranging:
dN A dt = rAV
t1 =
dN A rV N A0 A
N A1
-rA -rAV
= = = =
(1st-order)
So:
dN A t1 = kN A NA1
1 N A0 t1 = ln k N A1
CSTR
nA0 CA0
T0 (m3/s)
V
CA
T (m3/s)
Assume: Continuous supply of feed and product removal Well-mixed Steady-state reaction rate the same everywhere and time independent. concentration the same everywhere so exit point the same
dN j dt
So nj0 -
=0
(steady state)
nj
rjV
V =
n j0 n j rj
This is the reactor volume required to reduce the entering flow rate, nj0 to nj when species j is disappearing at a rate, -rj.
nj
= volumetric flow
V =
0 C j 0 C j
rj
Assumes: Plug flow no radial variations in velocity, concentration or temperature (flat velocity profile) Steady state Continuous supply of feed and product removed
nj0
nj|V+V
V+V
Mole balance in a differential segment/volume V: In nj|V out nj|V+V + + generation rjV = = accumulation 0
Divide by V:
n j|V + V n j|V V
= rj
In the limit V 0
dn j dV
= rj
Consider
AB nA0 nA nA1
V1
dV =
dn A rA
dn A V1 = = rA nA0
n A1
nA0
dn A rA n A1
dn A = V1 = kC A k n A1
nA0
nA0
dn A nA n A1
n A0 C A0 = ln V1 = ln k nA k C A
r jV =
dN j dt
V =
0 C j 0 C j
rj
dV =
dn j rj