Batch Reactor Pattern
Batch Reactor Pattern
*Rate Law = single reaction & irreversible (only reactants must be considered)
=
=
=
Legends:
k = rate constant (changes with temperature; unique for every reaction)
x = order of reaction with respect to A
y = order of reaction with respect to B
(x + y) = overall order of the reaction
NOTE: x and y are NOT related to a and b. They can only be determined
EXPERIMENTALLY.
Sample Problem 1:
1. For the rate equation: rate = k[ ][ ]
x What is the order of the reaction with respect to A? 1st order wrt A
x What is the order of the reaction with respect to B? 2nd order wrt B
x What is the overall order of the reaction? 1+2 = 3 (3rd order overall)
x What happens to the rate if concentration of B is doubled (keeping constant)?
The rate quadruples
x What happens to the rate if concentration of A is doubled (keeping constant)?
The rate doubles
Batch Reactor
x Closed System
x mixture is usually in liquid phase
(density is constant)
x well mixed (A, B, CA, CB and T are
uniform)
x CA, CB and T changes with time
14 | Rate Law: Effect of Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Reaction Rate Measurement
0 0.1
50 0.0905 1.9 x 10
10 000 0
15 | Rate Law: Effect of Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Sample Problem 1:
The overall chemical equation for the reaction of nitrogen oxide, NO with chlorine,
Cl2, is: 2NO + Cl2 Æ 2NOCl. The initial rates of reaction for various concentrations of the
reactants were measured and recorded at constant temperature as follows:
'CCl2/'t
Convince yourself rave,init = -'
Determine the rate law for this reaction. Calculate the numerical value of the rate
constant. What is the overall order of the reaction? What is the rate of appearance of
NOCl when the initial concentrations of the reactant are CNO = 0.20 M and CCl2 = 0.30 M?
Note: You have to convince yourself that the initial average rate is equal to the rate of
disappearance of Chlorine.
Solution:
To solve for y:
, , (0.25) (0.5)
= =
, , (0.25) (1.0)
, , (0.25) (0.5)
= =
, , (0.25) (1.0)
(0.5)
=
(1.0)
0.75 /ℎ (0.5)
=
3.02 /ℎ (1.0)
= 2.009586049
= 2.0096
= .
To solve for x:
, , (0.25) (1.0)
= =
, , (0.50) (2.0)
, , (0.25) (1.0)
= =
, , (0.50) (2.0)
(0.25) (1.0)
=
(0.50) (2.0)
3.02 /ℎ (0.25)
= (0.25)
24.10 /ℎ (0.50)
= 0.9964126918
= 0.9964 ≈ .
16 | Rate Law: Effect of Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Determine the Rate Law for this reaction.
Select Experiment 1:
= , ,
= + =1+2=
What is the rate of appearance of NOCl when the initial concentrations of the reactant are
CNO = 0.20 M and CCl2 = 0.30 M?
12
= (0.20 )(0.30 )
ℎ
= 0.216
ℎ
∆
=+
2∆
∆
= 2( )
∆
∆
= 2 0.216
∆ ℎ
∆
= .
∆
17 | Rate Law: Effect of Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
DIFFERENTIAL METHOD (CONSTANT VOLUME SYSTEMS)
Reaction: →
= − =
Taking the natural log, recall the properties of logarithm:
− = +
Recognize that this is in slope-intercept form = + ; where
− is the y value, is the slope, is the x value and is the y
intercept.
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
dCA/dt
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
lnCA
2. Determine slope = reaction order and the y-intercept which is equal to lnk.
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
dCA/dt
0.5
slope
0.4
0.3
0.2 ln k
0.1
0
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
lnCA
18 | Differential Method (Constant Volume …) | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Sample Problem 1:
The reaction of triphenyl methyl (trityl) chloride (A) and methanol (B)
( ) + → ( ) +
+ → +
It was carried out in a solution of benzene and pyridine at 25℃. Pyridine reacts
with HCl that precipitates as pyridine hydrochloride thereby making the reactions
irreversible. The concentration to time data below was obtained in a batch
reactor.
3
The initial concentration of methanol was 0.5 / .
Solution:
For part a. Determine the reaction order with respect to A.
19 | Differential Method (Constant Volume …) | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
5. The rate equation will become:
=− = ′
− = +
Recall: Recognize that this is in slope-intercept form = + ; where
− is the y value, is the slope, is the x value and ′ is the y
intercept.
Graphical Method
∆ −
− =
∆ −
time (min) ( / × 10 )
0 50
50 38
100 30.6
150 25.6
200 22.2
250 19.5
∆
Solve for − ∆
at EACH STEP of time.
Example for:
time (min) ( / × 10 ) ∆ − 38 − 50
− = = = 0.24
0 50 ∆ − 50 − 0
50 38
I
∆
It’s been a practice to multiply − ∆
values to 10 to scale those values easier as
we graph them later, also called normalizing values. Therefore,
∆ 0.24 × 10
− × 10 = = 2.4
∆ 10
Notice that we also divided the value by 103, because according to the data given
those concentrations in the table are at mol/dm3×103
∆
time (min) ( / × 10 ) − × 10
∆
0 50 -
50 38 2.4
100 30.6 1.48
150 25.6 1.0
200 22.2 0.68
250 19.5 0.54
20 | Differential Method (Constant Volume …) | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
∆
Plot − × 10 .
∆
2.5
2
∆
− × 10 1.5
∆
1
0.5
0
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
(min)
Draw a curve in the graph in such a way that it will cut through the points equally.
3
These areas are equal
2.5
2
∆
− × 10 These pair of areas are equal
∆ 1.5
0.5
0
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
(min)
21 | Differential Method (Constant Volume …) | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Get the instantaneous rate at each point of time which is the y-values of intersection of
the curve to time for each step, which are shown as red dots in the illustration below.
3
2.5
∆ 2
− × 10
∆
1.5
0.5
0
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
(min)
time −
∆
× 10 ( / − ) − × 10 ( / − )
( / × 10 )
(min) ∆
0 50 - 3.0
2.4
50 38 1.75
1.48
100 30.6 1.25
1.0
150 25.6 0.8
0.68
200 22.2 0.55
0.54
250 19.5 0.47
− × 10 − × 10 × 10 ( × 10 )
3.0 1.0986 50 3.912
1.75 0.5596 38 3.6375
1.25 0.2231 30.6 3.4210
0.8 -0.2231 25.6 3.2425
0.55 -0.5978 22.2 3.1001
0.47 -0.7550 19.5 2.9704
22 | Differential Method (Constant Volume …) | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Use Microsoft excel to generate the equation of the linear regression to determine the
slope.
Solution:
For part b. In a separate set of experiments, the reaction order with respect to B was
1 order. Determine the value of k.
− × 10 − × 10 × 10 ( × 10 )
3.0 1.0986 50 3.912
1.75 0.5596 38 3.6375
1.25 0.2231 30.6 3.4210
0.8 -0.2231 25.6 3.2425
0.55 -0.5978 22.2 3.1001
Recall:
0.47 -0.7550 19.5 2.9704
=− = ′
Choose any point from the table of the measured data. For example:
− × 10 − × 10 × 10 ( × 10 )
0.55 -0.5978 22.2 3.1001
Use the true values at this point and substitute to the rate law equation to solve for k’.
23 | Differential Method (Constant Volume …) | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
− = ′
5.5 × 10 = 0.222
−
= 0.1116
−
= 0.2232
ADDITIONAL NOTE:
We can solve for the rate of the whole reaction from all the data that we’ve gathered.
= 0.2232
24 | Differential Method (Constant Volume …) | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
POLYNOMIAL FIT FOR DIFFERENTIAL METHOD OF KINETIC ANALYSIS
Sample Problem 1:
The reaction → 2 is carried out in a constant volume batch reactor at 25⁰C.
To navigate in MS Excel:
Insert > Charts > Scatter > Select Data > Add x & y values (Optional)
Chart Design > Axis Title
To Expose R2:
Click Data > Right Click > Add Trend Line > Polynomial > Display
Equation on Chart > Display R2 on Chart
The lowest counting number to reach unity is the best polynomial fit.
25 | Polynomial Fit for Differential Method of … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Proceed to Step 4 (solve for the derivative of the model)
Plot − vs .
Rate Law: = − =
ln − = ln + ln
= + + + +
= + 2 + 3 + 4
0.12
y = -7E-11x3 + 2E-07x2 - 0.0002x + 0.1
0.1
R² = 1
0.08
CA (mol/L)
0.06
0.04
0.02
0
0 200 400 600 800 1000
t (s)
= 0.1 − 0.0002 + 2 × 10 − 7 × 10
= −0.0002 + 4 × 10 − 2.1 × 10
26 | Polynomial Fit for Differential Method of … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
− = 0.0002 − 4 × 10 + 2.1 × 10
ln − = ln + 1.5986 ln
0
-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0
-2
y = 1.5986x - 4.6968 -4
R² = 0.9785
ln(-dCA/dt)
-6
-8
-10
-12
ln(CA)
Interior point: = ( ) − ( )
∆
Example: = [ − ]
∆
Last point: = ( ) − 4 ( ) + 3
∆
Example: = ∆
[ − 4 +3 ]
27 | Polynomial Fit for Differential Method of … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
1. A gaseous reaction: 2A (g) + B (g) ⟶ 2C (g) showed a decrease in pressure from
120 mm Hg to 100 mm Hg in 10 minutes. What is the rate of appearance of C?
Answer: 4 mm Hg/min
(a) What is the rate law for the reaction? (b) Determine the rate constant.
t,min 0 9 18 24 40 54 72 105
(CH3)3CBr 0.1056 0.0961 0.0856 0.0767 0.0645 0.0536 0.0432 0.0270
(mol/L)
What is the order of the reaction? What is the rate constant of the reaction? Use
graphical and polynomial fit (3rd order) differential method. You should provide the
following sample table for comparison of the methods:
Time (min) 10 20 30 40 50 60
28 | Polynomial Fit for Differential Method of … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Ppm Br2 2.45 1.7 1.2 0.88 0.62 0.44
Determine whether the reaction rate is zero, first, or second order in bromine, and
calculate the reaction rate constant in units of your choice. Assuming identical
exposure conditions, calculate the required hourly rate of injection of bromine (in
pounds) into a sunlit body of water, 25,000 gal in volume, to maintain a sterilizing
level of bromine of 1.0 ppm. Use finite difference differential method.
29 | Polynomial Fit for Differential Method of … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
THE INTEGRATED RATE LAW: CONCENTRATION DEPENDENCE ON TIME
Integrated Rate Law – shows how the concentrations of species in the reaction
depend on time
2 ( )
→ ( )
(other reactants can be present but is in zeroth order)
=−
=−
=−
ln | =− |
0
ln − ln =−
From stoichiometry
= =
=
= (1 − )
since it is in constant volume, then = :
30 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
( )
=
= (1 − ) (only possible if the volume is constant)
= (1 − ) = −
get the derivative
=− (plug in to the rate law equation)
=
( )
= (1 − )
= (1 − )
( )
=
∫ ( )
= ∫
= 1−
= −
∫ = − ln +
− ln|1 − = | | |
0 0
− ln|1 − | − (− ln|1 − 0|) − ln|1 − 0| =
− ln|1 − | =
Half-life form: ⁄ =
31 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Solution:
a.)
ln = − + ln
=− +
= 0.000135741294390876
= . × = . ×
ln = ln −
ln(0.4 ) = ln − (1.3754 × 10 )
0.4
ln = − (1.3754 × 10 )
ln(0.4) = −(1.3754 × 10 )
= . = .
32 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Using conversion form:
− ln( 1 − ) =
− ln( 1 − 0.6) = (1.3754 × 10 )
= . = .
c.)
, ⁄ = 0.5
ln = ln − ⁄
ln(0.5 ) = ln − ⁄
0.5
ln =− ⁄
ln(0.5) = ⁄
ln 2
⁄ =
ln 2
⁄ =
1.3754 × 10
⁄ = . = .
d.)
After 1 half-life: = =
After 2 half-lives: = = =
After 3 half-lives: = = =
After 4 half-lives: = = =
After 5 half-lives: = = =
ln = ln −
use: = 195 and = 1.6 × 10
= 0.01664291635
=
2
0.01664291635
=
32
= . ×
Comprised of 2 cases:
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2 ( ) → 2 ( ) +2 ( )
Rate Law:
− =
= ∶
1−
Half-life Form:
1
=
Where in:
= Concentration of A at time t
= rate constant
= time
= Initial concentration of A
= Half-life
= Conversion of A
Derivation
− =
= −
1
− | = |
1 1
− − =−
1 1
= +
y b mx
34 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Second Order Reaction Derivation of Integral Rate Law in terms of Conversion
= (1 − )= − Plug in to rate
=−
(differential) law
Rate Law:
− = = (1 − ) ∫ ( )
= ∫
=1−
=−
1
− = +
1
| = |
1−
=1
− =
=0
1−1+
=
1−
=
1−
y m x
Sample Problem 1:
Solution:
a.
= 0.30, = 5.82 ℎ
= 4.46
=
1−
0.30
= 4.46 (5.82 ℎ)
1 − 0.30
0.0165
= .ℎ
35 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
=
1−
0.75 0.0165
= .ℎ
4.46
1 − 0.75
= .
b.
, = 0.50
1 1
= +
0.50
1 1
− =
0.50
− 0.50
=
0.50
0.50
=
0.50
1
=
1
=
Note: Half-life for 2nd order reaction depends on the reaction rate constant and the
initial concentration of the reactant.
1
=
0.0165
4.46 .ℎ
= .
Sample Problem 2:
Solution:
Note: Since it is stated in the problem that the reaction is 50% complete after 5.82
hours,
36 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
/ = 5.82 ℎ
Note: For a single and identical reactant type of reaction, the time to achieve a
50% conversion is the half-life of the reaction. For a different reactant type of
reaction, the time to achieve a 50% conversion of the limiting reactant is the half-
life of the reaction.
This type of reaction takes place when a catalyst is required for a certain
reaction to occur.
Note: The overall reaction rate will be limited by the value of the rate constant.
Rate Law:
− = =
Integrated Form:
= −
Half-life Form:
/ =
2
Where in:
= concentration of A at time t
= rate constant
= time
= initial concentration of A
/ = half-life
= conversion of A
Concentration-Time Equation
Order Rate Law Half-Life
0 = = − =
2
2
1 = = − =
1 1 1
2 = = + =
In case the order of reaction is not given, you can use the integrated rate
law to evaluate the order of reaction in the problem.
37 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Sample Problem: Decomposition of H2O2
[ ] (min)
0.300 M 0
0.221 M 1
0.107 M 5
0.065 M 10
0.047 M 15
0.037 M 20
Zeroth Order
0.3
0.25
R² = 0.7721
Hydrogen Peroxide
Concentration (M)
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
0
0 5 10 15 20
-0.05
Time (minutes)
First Order
0
0 5 10 15 20
-0.5
-1
R² = 0.9308
-1.5
ln [H2O2]
-2
-2.5
-3
-3.5
-4
Time (minute)
38 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Second Order
30
25
R² = 0.9999
20
1/H202
15
10
0
0 5 10 15 20
Time (minute)
Note: To determine the order of reaction of decomposition of H2O2, graph the given
Concentration-Time data and get the R-squared of each order reaction using
regression analysis. The order of reaction of the decomposition of H2O2 will be the
order of reaction having R-squared value near unity.
Since second order has the value nearest to unity, it is rightfully to say that
the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) obeys second order kinetics.
Rate = kCH2o22
Sample Problem 1:
The half-life period of a first order chemical reaction is 6.93
minutes. The time (minutes) required for the completion of 99% of the
chemical reaction will be:
= 6.93
= 0.99
ℎ =?
Solution:
ln(2)
=
ln(2)
6.93 =
= 0.1000212382
− = (1 − ) = −
− = (1 − 0.99) = (0.1 )( )
= 46.04192338
= .
39 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
Sample Problem 2:
The data at the left were collected in a study of the photochemical
degradation of ozone, O3, by light. Analysis of the data gave a straight- line
relationship when the C03-1 was plotted versus time.
2 ( ) 3 ( )
Time (s) (O3) (M)
0 2.98 x 10-3
50 2.40 x 10-3
100 1.90 x 10-3
150 1.60 x 10-3
200 1.35 x 10-3
250 1.18 x 10-3
300 1.07 x 10-3
400 8.65 x 10-3
Solution:
Where: = ; = ; = ; =
Using Excel plot the given data and perform linear regression.
By Linear Regression:
.
Based on the linear equation: = =
∙
1 1
= +
40 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018
1 1 2.0709
= + (523 )
2.98 × 10 ∙
= 7.0489492 × 10
= . ×
Sample Problem 3:
The time for half-life period of a certain reaction A Æ Product is 1
hour when the initial concentration of the reactant ‘A’ is 2.0 mol L -1, How
many hours does it take for its concentration to come from 0.50 to 0.25 mol
L-1 if it’s a zero-order reaction?
= 1ℎ
=2
0.5 → = 0.25 =?
2
=
2(1 ℎ )
=1
−ℎ
41 | The Integrated Rate Law: Concentration … | ChE 417 | RDMaalihan | BSChE Batch 2018