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Chapter 3 Notes

The document discusses key process variables that chemical engineers must understand to design and operate processes, including mass, volume, flow rate, chemical composition, concentration, pressure, and temperature. It provides examples of how each variable is defined and measured, such as using flowmeters to measure volumetric flow rate, calculating molar composition from mass composition, and using various instruments like thermometers, thermocouples and pyrometers to measure temperature. The document emphasizes that knowledge and control of these process variables is important for chemical engineers in their work.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
17 views3 pages

Chapter 3 Notes

The document discusses key process variables that chemical engineers must understand to design and operate processes, including mass, volume, flow rate, chemical composition, concentration, pressure, and temperature. It provides examples of how each variable is defined and measured, such as using flowmeters to measure volumetric flow rate, calculating molar composition from mass composition, and using various instruments like thermometers, thermocouples and pyrometers to measure temperature. The document emphasizes that knowledge and control of these process variables is important for chemical engineers in their work.

Uploaded by

carry master
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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Chapter 3, Lecture 1

Process Variables
Process is defined as a set of operations to achieve a particular
objective:
e.g. the process of making maleic anhydride product via n-butane oxidation by
air in the presence of a vanadium-phosphorus-oxide catalyst, air and n-butane
involves 7 major operations (1) pumped, (2) mixed, (3) pre-heated to a reaction
temperature (~400oC), (4) introduced into the catalytic reactor; (5) effluent is
passed through a water scrubber to remove maleic anhydride, (6) the scrubber
solution is passed through a carbon filter to remove colored impurities, and (7)
water is evaporated to isolate salable maleic anhydride product.

Chemical engineers are responsible for designing and operating,


troubleshooting, and de-bottlenecking processes

These activities involve the knowledge and control of process variables

Mass and Volume


- density and effect of temperature on density
- specific gravity, SG = ρ/ ρref, e.g. ρH2O(4oC)=1.000 g/cm3

Flow Rate
- , mass flow rate (mass/time)
- , volumetric flow rate (volume/time)
-

- molar flow rate (moles/time)


- measured with flowmeters: rotameters and orifice meters

Question: come up with as many different ways to measure sugar


concentration in water as possible.
Chemical Composition

Atomic and molecular weights


- convention: 12C atom weighs exactly 12 atomic units and atomic
weight is 12 g/mol
- gram-mole (g-mol) and pound-mole (lb-mole)
- Molecular weight M corresponds to M g/mol and M lbm/lb-mole
- Avogadro’s number (1 g-mol = 6.02 x 1023)

Conversion Between Mass and Moles


- how many (1) mol N2O, (2) mol N, (3) mol N2, (4) mol O, (5) lb-
mol N2O, (6) g N, and (7) molecules of N2O are in 88 g of N2O (M
= 44)?
- If N2O is delivered at a rate of 4.4 g/min to a dental patient, what is
the molar flow rate in mol/h?

Mass/Mole/Volume Fractions and Average Molecular Weight


Conversion from Mass to Molar Composition
- flue gas having the following composition: 15 vol. % CO2, 20
vol. % N2, 5 vol. % O2, and 60 vol. % H2O
- convert to mass and mole fractions
- what is its average molecular weight?

Concentration
- mass, molar concentration
- 1 M aqueous solution of maleic anhydride (MA, C4H2O3) flows
into an evaporator at a rate of 2 m3/min. The density of the solution
is 1.06 g/cm3. Calculate (1) mass concentration of MA in kg/m3,
(2) mass flow rate of MA in kg/s, and (3) the mass fraction of MA.
Chapter 3, Lecture 2
Process Variables
Concentration (Continued)
- ppm, ppb, ppt
Pressure
- units: Pa, dynes/cm2, lbf/in2 or psi, Torr/mm Hg, bar
- fluid pressure
- hydrostatic pressure: P = F/A = Po + ρgh
- head of particular fluid, when Po = 0

Questions: does the pressure at the plug depend on the height of the opening in
the tank? Does it depend on the nature of the fluid? If the pressure is given as
560 mm Hg, what is the height of the tank?
- atmospheric, absolute, and gauge pressure
- Pabsolute = Pgauge + Patmospheric
- Pabsolute = Patmospheric – Pvacuum
Fluid Pressure Measurement
- elastic-element methods (Bourdon tubes, bellows, diaphragms)
- liquid-column methods (manometers)
- electrical methods (ion and strain gauges, piezoresistive and
piezoelectric transducers)
- barometers
Temperature
- measure of kinetic energy
- measuring some physical property which depends on temperature
- resistance thermometer, thermocouple, pyrometer, thermometer
- temperature scales require reference points for temperature
- definition of a degree on Celsius and Fahrenheit scales
- Kelvin and Rankine scales
- conversion factors: 1.8oF=1.8oR = 1oC = 1K

Question: suggest different ways one could measure the temperature inside the
coal-burner of Zimmer power plant located in scenic Moscow, OH.

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