An-Najah National University: Materials/Mass Balance
An-Najah National University: Materials/Mass Balance
Materials/Mass Balance
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Control Volume (CV)
• CV: boundaries to the system as
imaginary blocks around the process or
part of the process so the calculations are
made as simple as possible.
CV
River in
Input Output
LAKE River out Accumulation
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Examples of Control Volumes
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Useful Relations
• Density (ρ) [M/L3] = Mass [M]/Volume [L3]
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Mass Balance
Input Output
Accumulation dM/dt
In Out
min [M/T] Accumulation = Input – Output mout [M/T]
Qin [L3/T] Qout [L3/T]
CAin [M/L3] CAout [M/L3]
Units:
M in kg, g, mol, eq…etc.
m in kg/h, g/s, mol/day, eq/wk….etc.
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Mass Balance
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Example 3-1 Page 89
Accumulation = 1kg
food = 0.5* In , Recycle = 0.25* solid waste, solid waste at the curb = ??
Solution:
In = Acc. + out = 1+(0.5*50+solid waste) → solid waste = 24
solid waste at the curb = 24 – 0.25 * 24 = 18 kg
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Example 3-2 page 91
Wasted water = ??
Solution:
Accumulation = mass in – mass out
(Vacc )(ρ) = (Qin ) (ρ) (t) – (Qout ) (ρ) (t)
Vacc = (Qin ) (t) – (Qout ) (t)
350 = 1.32t – 0.32 t
t = 350 min
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Example 3-3 Page 91
A storm sewer network in a small residential subdivision
is shown in the following sketch. The flow rate for each
section of pipe is also shown by each section of pipe.
The capacity of each pipe is 0.120 m3.s-1 . During
large rain storms River street floods below junction
number 1 because flow of water exceeds the capacity
of the storm sewer pipe. To alleviate this problem and
to provide extra capacity for expansion, it is proposed
to build a retention pond to hold the storm water until
the storm is over and then gradually release it. Where
in the pipe network should the retention pond be built
to provide approximately 60% extra capacity (0.07
m3.s-1 ) in the remaining system?
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0.00 0.01 0.01 0.01
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11 12
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River
1 2 3
Street
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0.005 0.01 0.01 0.01
11 12
10
0.01
0.015 0.01
0.005 0.01 0.01 0.01
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9
7
0.03
0.02 0.02
1 2 3
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Mass Balance for Component A
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Efficiency
Input Output
Accumulation dM/dt
In Out
min [M/T] mout [M/T]
Qin [L3/T] Qout [L3/T]
CAin [M/L3] CAout [M/L3]
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Example 3-4 page 94
Baghouse
Total number of bags = 424, Q for each bag = 1/424 of total Q (parallel)
1- in normal operation, calculate the fraction of particulate matter removed and the
efficiency
2- Estimate the mass emission rate when one bag is missing and recalculate the
efficiency
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Example 3-4 page 94 (solution)
Baghouse
1- Normal operation:
dM/dt = Cin Qin - Cout Qout = (15,000 mg . m-3) (47 m3 . s-1 ) – (24 mg . m-3 ) (47 m3 . s-1 )
= 703,872 mg . s-1
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Example 3-4 page 94 (solution)
Cemission = ?
Qemission = 47 m3 . s-1
2- When one bag is missing:
Cin = 15 g . m-3
Qin = (1/424)47 m3 . s-1
“Bypass” Baghouse
Acc. Cout = ?
Cin = 15 g . m-3 Qout = (423/424) 47 m3 . s-1
Qin = (423/424)47 m3 . s-1
dM/dt = ?
“Bypass”
From baghouse
dM/dt = (Cin Qin from bypass + Cin Qin from baghouse )- Cout Qout
dM/dt = 0 (no accumulation at the junction)
Cout Qout= Cin Qin from bypass + Cin Qin from baghouse
The only unknown is Cout
Cout = 59 mg . m-3
The overall efficiency:
η= (Cin Qin - Cout Qout )/ (Cin Qin ) * 100% , Qin = Qout
= (15,000 mg . m-3) – (59 mg . m-3 )/ (15,000 mg . m-3) = 99.61%
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State of Mixing
• State of mixing is important in the application of
mass balance equation
• Coffee and cream example
• Completely mixed systems are those in which
every drop of fluid is homogeneous with every
other drop, that is every drop of fluid contains
the same concentration of material or physical
property (e.g. temperature)
• Very difficult to achieve in real systems – we use
approximations
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State of Mixing
• Completely unmixed systems – plug-flow
systems
• Example of a train moving along a railroad track
• Plug-flow systems are also very difficult to
achieve in real systems – we use
approximations
• Steady state condition: the rate of input and
the rate of output are constant and equal –
Accumulation = 0.
• Steady state does not imply equilibrium (e.g.
water running into a pond)
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Example 3-5 page 98
Cse = 1.200 mg.L-1
Qse = 2000 L.min-1 Assumptions: complete
mixing and steady state
Cmix = [Cst Qst + CseQse ] / [Qst+Qse] (make the necessary unit conversions)
= 39.34 mg.L-1
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Including Reactions
• Conserved Substances: Substances do not undergo
chemical, biological or radioactive transformations.
• Examples of conservative substances: salt in water,
argon in air
• Examples of non-conservative substances: decomposing
organic matter
• In case of transformations, Mass Balance will become:
Accumulation Rate = Input Rate – Output Rate ± Transformation Rate
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Kinetics
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• So, r = - k Cn
• k: reaction rate constant
• C: concentration of substance
• n: exponent or reaction order
• For first order reactions:
The rate of loss of the substance is proportional to
the amount of substance present at any given
time t. n=1 (e.g. oxidation of organic compounds
by micro-organisms, radioactive decay)
• So, r = - k C = dC/dt (units of k; s-1 or d-1)
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• By Integration:
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• For completely mixed systems with first-
order reactions:
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Example 3-6 page 100
Decay
Sewage Ceff =?
Cin = 180 mg.L-1
Qin = 430 m3.d-1 Lagoon Qeff = 430 m3.d-1
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• For plug-flow systems with first-order reactions:
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• Define θ as residence time in PFR = V/Q
• Integration of the above equation:
Also,
u: sped of flow, L: system length, A: x-sectional area of PFR
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Example 3-7 page 102
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Reactors
• The tanks in which physical, chemical, and
biochemical reactions occur
• Classified based on their flow characteristics and
their mixing conditions
Batch
No-flow
Reactor
Reactors Completely
Mixed
Continuous
Flow
Plug-Flow
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Batch Reactor
• Fill-and-draw type
• The composition within the tank changes with time as the reaction proceeds
• There is no flow into or out of the reactor
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Completely Mixed Flow Reactor (CMFR)
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Detention Time
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Reactor comparison
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Example 3-8 page 105
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Example 3-9
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Example 3-10
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