Lesson 6
Lesson 6
Balances
Chemical Reaction Stoichiometry
Solution
Flow rates of feed streams entering reactor: 20 kmol C2H2/h & 50 kmol
H2/h
Only 40 kmol H2/h is used.
(50.0 – 40.0) kmol/h
Fraction excess of H2 = = 0.25 or 25% excess H2
40.0 kmol/h
Fractional Conversion of a reactant
Fraction Unreacted
f = Moles reacted
1-f
Moles fed
Example
100 moles of reactant enters a system and only 90 moles of reactant reacted.
90 moles
f = = 0.9
100 moles
20 mol/min of reactant enters a system and the percentage conversion 80%
f = 0.8 (20 mol/min)
= 16 mol/min
• Suppose start with nA0, nB0, and nC0 moles of A, B, and C and
at some time later there are nA, nB, and nC moles of the 3
species in the reactor.
• Thus, extent of reaction ξ (dimensionless)
• ξ starts at zero when the reaction commences, increase as
the reaction proceeds, and has the same value for all
species.
• Thus, if ni0 for all the species in a system and the value of the
ni for any one species are known, we can calculate ξ for that
species and then calculate the remaining ni values.
• N ammonia formation reaction.
• Feed consists of 100 mol/s N2, 300 mol/s H2 and 1 mol/s
of argon. The reactor outlet flow rate;
100 mol N2/s + (-1 mol N2/s) ξ
300 mol H2/s + (-3 mol H2/s) ξ
(2 mol NH3/s) ξ
1 mol Ar/s
ξ
How long will the system take to reach a specified state short
of equilibrium. Chemical kinetics.
Type of reactions:
(a) Irreversible reactions – The reaction only proceeds in a
single direction (from reactants to products) and the
concentration of the limiting reactant eventually approaches
zero.
(b) Reversible reactions – Reactants form products and
products undergo the reverse reactions to reform reactants.
𝐶 2 𝐻 4 + 𝐻 2 ❑ 𝐶 2 𝐻 2 𝑂𝐻
↔
CO (g) + H2O (g) CO2 + H2 (g)
Suppose the feed to a reactor contains 1.00 mol of CO, 2.00 mol of H 2O
and no CO2 or H2, and the reaction mixture comes to equilibrium at 1105
K. Calculate the equilibrium composition and the fractional conversion of
the limiting reactant.
ξ
CO (g) + H2O (g) CO2 + H2 (g)
Express all mole fraction in terms of a single variable
nCO = 1.00 mol - ξe
nH O = 2.00 mol - ξe ξ
2
nCO2 = ξe
n H2 = ξe
nTotal = 3.00 mol
From which 0.111
yCO = (1.00 mol – ξe )/3.00 mol 0.444
yH O = (2.00 mol – ξe)/3.00 mol 0.222
2
0.222
yCO2 = ξe /3.00 mol
yH 2
Substitution of= these
ξe /3.00 mol
expressions into the equilibrium relation (with K
= 1.00) yields yCO2 yH2 ξe
= = 1.00
yCO yH2O (1.00 mol – ξe)(2.00mol – ξe)
ξe = 0.667 mol
Solution (Cont.)
The limiting reactant is CO. At equilibrium
nCO = (1.00 – 0.667) mol
= 0.333 mol
C2H4 + ½ O2 → C2H4O
C2H4 + 3O2 → 2CO2 + 2H2O
(nC2H4)out = (nC2H4)0 – ξ1 – ξ2
(nO2)out = (nO2)0 – 0.5ξ1 – 3ξ2
(nC2H4O)out = (nC2H4O)0 + ξ1
(nCO2)out = (nCO2)0 + 2ξ2
(nH2O)out = (nH2O)0 + 2ξ2
The reactions
C2H6 → C 2H4 + H 2
C2H6 + H2 → 2CH4
take place in a continuous reactor at steady state. The feed contains
85.0 mole% ethane (C2H6) and the balance inerts (I). The fractional conversion
of ethane is 0.501, and the fractional yield of ethylene (C2H4) is 0.471. Calculate
the molar composition of the product gas and the selectivity of ethylene to
methane (CH4) production.
Basis:100 mol
Reactor
0.850 mol C2H6/mol n1 (mol C2H6)
0.150 mol I/mol n2 (mol C2H4)
n3 (mol H2)
n1 (mol C2H6) = 85.0 mol C2H6 – ξ1 – ξ2 n4 (mol CH4)
n2 (mol C2H4) = ξ1 n5 (mol I)
n3 (mol H2) = ξ1 – ξ2
n4 (mol CH4) = 2 ξ2
nI (mol I) = 15.0 mol I
Ethane Conversion: fraction conversion is 0.501, the fraction unconverted (leaving
the reactor) must be (1-0.501)
Recall…
42.4 mol C2H6
n2 = 0.471 (85.0 mol C2H4) = 40.0 mol C2H4 = ξ1
n1 (mol C2H6) = 85.0 mol C2H6 – ξ1 – ξ2
ξ2 = 2.6 mol
37.4 mol H2
n3 = ξ1 – ξ2
5.2 mol CH4
n4 = 2 ξ2
nTotal = (42.4 + 40.0 + 37.4 + 5.2 + 15.0) mol = 140.0 mol
• Since N2 & O2 are shown a being in the same ratio wherever they
appear, you cannot count them as 2 independent species. So, only
2 independent molecular species balance, one for either O 2 or N2
and one for CCl4.
• Similarly, atomic nitrogen (N) and atomic oxygen (O); and also
atomic chlorine and atomic carbon (4 mol Cl/1 mol C).
• Consequently, even though 4 atomic species are there, you may
count only 2 independent atomic species balances.
• Chemical reactions are independent if the stoichiometric
equation of any one of them cannot be obtained by adding
and subtracting multiples of the stoichiometric equations of
the others.
38 mol CO2
(b) H2O Balance
generation = output
2 mol H2O produced
nH2O 18 mol CH4reacted
1mol CH4reacted
36 mol H2O
(c) O2 Balance
input = output + consumption
2 mol O2produced 0.6 mol O2
nO2 18 mol CH4reacted 100mol
1mol CH4reacted mol
60 36 24 mol O2
Atomic Species Balance
(a) C Balance
(b) H Balance
nO 2 24 mol O 2
75 mol A/min 100 mol A/min 25 mol A/min Product 75 mol B/min
Reactor Separation
75 mol B/min Unit
25 mol A/min
C3H8 C3H6 + H2
Overall C Balance
(100 mol C3H8)(3 mol C/mol C3H8) = [n6(mol C3H8)](3 mol C/mol C3H8) +
[n7(mol C3H6)] (3 mol C/mol C3H6)
n7 = 95 mol C3H6
Overall H Balance
(100 mol)(8) = n6(8) + n7(6) + n8(2)
The product therefore contains
Therefore n8 = 95 mol H2
5 mol C3H8 2.6 mole% C3H8
95 mol C3H6 48.7 mole% C3H6
95 mol H2 48.7 mole% H2
From the previous slide
n6 = 5 mol C3H8
n7 = 95 mol C3H6
Reactor
Fresh Feed 100 mol C2H4/s Absorber
50 mol C2H4/s Solvent
60 mol C2H4/s 50 mol O2/s
30 mol O2/s 565 mol N2/s 25 mol O2/s
113 mol N2/s 565 mol N2/s
50 mol C2H4O/s Product
50 mol C2H4O/s
Solvent
Methanol is produced in the reaction of carbon dioxide and hydrogen
CO2 + 3H2 CH3OH + H2O
The fresh feed to the process contains hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and
0.400 mole% inerts (I). The reactor effluent passes to a condenser that
removes essentially all of the methanol and water formed and none of the
reactants or inerts.
The latter substances are recycled to the reactor. To avoid buildup of the
inerts in the system, a purge stream is withdrawn from the recycle.
The feed to the reactor contains 28.0 mole% CO2, 70.0 mole% H2, and
2.00 mole% inerts. The single-pass conversion of hydrogen is 60.0%.
Calculate the molar flowrates and molar compositions of the fresh feed,
the total feed to the reactor, the recycle stream and the purge stream for a
methanol production rate of 155 kmol CH3OH/h.
Basis: 100 mol Combined Feed to the Reactor CO2 + 3H2 CH3OH + H2O
nr mol np mol
x5C CO2 x5C CO2 x5C CO2
x5H H2 n5 mol x 5H H2 x5H H2
(1 - x5C -x5H) I (1 – x5C -x5H) I (1 – x -x ) I
5C 5H
Condenser Analysis
Total mole balance : input = output
n1 + n2 + n3 + n4 + 2.0 mol = n3 + n4 + n5
n5 = 44.0 mol
Flowchart Scaling
For assumed basis of 100 mol feed, the methanol production 14.0 mol
To scale the methanol production rate of 155 kmol/h
Ex. A gas contains 33.3 mole % CO2, 33.3 mole % N2 and 33.3 mole %
H2O (wet basis); contains 50 % CO2 and 50% N2 on a dry basis.
0.073 lb mol H 2 O
100 lb mol dry gas 7.53 lb mol H 2 O
lb mol dry gas
0.650 lb mol N 2
100 lb mol dry gas 65.0 lb mol N 2
lb mol dry gas
(100)(0.140) 14 lb mol CO 2
(100)(0.11 0) 11 lb mol CO
(100)(0.100) 10 lb mol O 2
Total 7.53 65 14 11 10 107.53 lb mol wet gas
65 lb mol N 2
yN 2 0.604
107.53 lb mol wet gas
14 lb mol CO2
yCO2 0.13
107.53 lb mol wet gas
11 lb mol CO
yCO 0.102
107.53 lb mol wet gas
10 lb mol O2
yO 2 0.93
107.53 lb mol wet gas
Theoretical and Excess Air
• Theoretical Oxygen - The moles or molar flow rate of oxygen need
for complete combustion of all the fuel fed to reactor. assuming
that all carbon is oxidized to CO2, hydrogen to H2O, all sulfur to
SO2.
air in 650 mol O 2 /h 4.76 mol air 3094 mol air/h
mol O 2
5000 3094
100% 61.6%
3094