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CL 208 Chemical Reaction Engineering-I

This document discusses non-isothermal reactor design, where the temperature inside the reactor can vary along the length. It provides examples of how to solve problems involving exothermic/endothermic reactions in plug flow reactors where the temperature changes adiabatically. The key steps are to write mole and energy balances, relate temperature to conversion using heat of reaction, and determine the reactor size required to achieve a given conversion. Interstage cooling/heating for multistage reactors is also covered.

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Satkar Jain
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
107 views34 pages

CL 208 Chemical Reaction Engineering-I

This document discusses non-isothermal reactor design, where the temperature inside the reactor can vary along the length. It provides examples of how to solve problems involving exothermic/endothermic reactions in plug flow reactors where the temperature changes adiabatically. The key steps are to write mole and energy balances, relate temperature to conversion using heat of reaction, and determine the reactor size required to achieve a given conversion. Interstage cooling/heating for multistage reactors is also covered.

Uploaded by

Satkar Jain
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CL 208

Chemical Reaction Engineering-I


Non-isothermal Reactor Design

 Seldom does reaction occur non-isothermally


 Temperature can vary along a PFR or heat removal from a CSTR
 What changes in our analysis of isothermal reactors?
 Consider this example:
“ For an exothermic reaction A  B being performed adiabatically in a PFR, what size of
reactor would be required to achieve a conversion of 90%?”

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How to go about solving this?

1. Mole balance (PFR)

2. Rate law (temperature dependency?)

3. How do we calculate temperature?

Energy balance
 First law of thermodynamics
 For Closed Systems/control mass e.g. batch reactors
(no mass crosses the boundaries)
 dE = dQ-dW
 Sign convention
 E = U + PE + KE
 In most cases U > PE, KE 3

Joules /s
The Energy Balance
First Law of Thermodynamics
 For Open Systems/control volume
 mass crosses the boundaries
 Energy exchange also happens by the flow of mass across the system boundaries

 Note the unit (rate of energy flow i.e. J/s and not J)
 Also note that the system is multi-species and they change between in and out

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The Flow work

 Separate the work term into flow work and other (shaft)work
 Flow work: Work necessary to get the mass into and out of the system
Wflow = Pv (v = specific volume)
(Or in terms of rate)
 H = U + PV

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The Energy Balance
 Consider the reaction aA + bB  cC + dD
 It can be shown that

 where subscript 0 refers to ‘in’ conditions.

 For single phase system, constant Cp, one can write

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The Energy Balance
 The Energy balance can now be written as

 At steady state, term on LHS is zero


 W here refers to the shaft work only and can be neglected often.
 For an adiabatic system Qdot = 0.
 For multiphase system, the equation in terms of H would be valid.
 Heat of reaction can be calculated from TRef to T

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Heat of Reaction
 Evaluate DHR at T2 for known DHR(T1)

 What is ΔCp?

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Equilibrium Conversion

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Equilibrium Conversion
 How is the equilibrium constant related with conversion?

 What is the relation between K and XA?

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Equilibrium Conversion
 How is the equilibrium constant related with conversion?

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Equilibrium Conversion

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Representing non-isothermal kinetic data
For any single homogeneous reaction, T, C/XA and –rA are uniquely related.

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Typical X vs T plot

Note that this plot is not using energy balance equation.

The plots represents kinetic data with T dependence.

Temperature progression
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Graphical Design Procedure

X T k -rA FA0/-
rA

Plot FA0/-rA vs XA and obtain the volume.

For a reversible reaction, remember to check if X can be achieved?

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Optimum Temperature Progression
We define the optimum temperature progression to be that progression which minimizes
VIF,, for a given conversion of reactant. This optimum may be an isothermal or it may be
a changing temperature: in time for a batch reactor, along the length of a plug flow
reactor, or from stage to stage for a series of mixed flow reactors.

Operating lines for minimum reactor size 17


Adiabatic Operation

Adiabatic operations with large enough heat effect to cause a rise in temperature (exothermic) or
drop in temperature (endothermic) in the reacting fluid.

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Adiabatic Operation
 Qdot = 0; Work (rate) = 0

 If DCP(T-TR) is negligible wrt heat of reaction, a linear relation is obtained


between X and T.
 This relation is from energy balance. The desired conversion would need to
satisfy mass balance too.
 Valid for CSTR, PFR and Batch reactors.
 Let us rearrange and get T = f(X).
 Ratio of Heat needed to raise the temperature to T and heat released by
reaction at T.
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Adiabatic Operation

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Interstage Cooling and Heating
 Exothermic reversible reaction
 Only a certain degree of conversion can be
achieved at a particular temperature
 Multiple reactors in series

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Interstage Cooling

For an exothermic reaction

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Interstage Heating
An example:
Upgrading Octane number of gasoline

Each step is highly endothermic


Allowable temperature range:
Above 530 °C, undesirable side reactions occur
Below 430 °C, the reaction almost does not take place

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Interstage Heating

For an endothermic reaction

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Non-Adiabatic Operations

∑FiHi ∑FiHi

V V+dV

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Non-adiabatic Operations: PFR
 Start with the energy balance below

 At steady state and no shaft work


 Consider an elemental volume dV having area dV
 Note that dFi/dV = ri = ni (-rA)

 The above eqn. needs to be solved together with mole balance eqn.

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PFR with heat exchange
UdA (Ta-T)

∑FiHi ∑FiHi

V V+dV

 Two cases of coolant flow:


 Ta constant
 Ta varying along the length (cocurrent/countercurrent)

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Non-adiabatic Operations: CSTR
 Use the energy balance equation

 Get X = f (T)

 You can also rewrite to get T =f (X)

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Non-adiabatic Operations: CSTR
 For specified X:
 Calculate T from T = f(X) obtained from energy balance (EB)
 get k get –rA  Plot FA0/(-rA) vs XA  calculate V
 For specified T:
 Calculate X from X = f(T) obtained from energy balance
 get k get –rA  Plot FA0/(-rA) vs XA  calculate V
 For specified V:
 Plot XEB vs T
 Calculate XMB = f(T)
 The intersection of the two will give reactor operating point.

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Non-adiabatic Operations: CSTR

Irreversible reaction

T1A: insufficient heat liberated by the


reaction to raise T for the reaction to be
self-sustaining

T1B: More than enough heat liberated

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Non-adiabatic Operations: CSTR

Irreversible reaction

T1C: 3 solutions

M’’: unstable state.


XA

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Non-adiabatic Operations: CSTR

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Product Distribution and Temperature
If two competing steps in multiple reactions have rate constants k ,
and k,, then the relative rates of these steps are given by

 A high temperaturefavors the reaction of higher activation energy,


 A low temperature favors the reaction of lower activation energy.
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Product Distribution and Temperature

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