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Topic 5 Steady-State Non-Isothermal Reactor Design (1120)

This document discusses non-isothermal reactor design for exothermic and endothermic reactions. It covers topics such as mole and energy balances, rate laws, equilibrium conversions, and the effects of temperature on reaction kinetics and yields. Examples are provided of determining the reactor volume required for a given conversion in an adiabatic plug flow reactor. The concepts of ignition-extinction curves and multiple steady states in continuous stirred tank reactors with heat effects are also introduced.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
524 views

Topic 5 Steady-State Non-Isothermal Reactor Design (1120)

This document discusses non-isothermal reactor design for exothermic and endothermic reactions. It covers topics such as mole and energy balances, rate laws, equilibrium conversions, and the effects of temperature on reaction kinetics and yields. Examples are provided of determining the reactor volume required for a given conversion in an adiabatic plug flow reactor. The concepts of ignition-extinction curves and multiple steady states in continuous stirred tank reactors with heat effects are also introduced.

Uploaded by

Nineteen Moscow
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Advanced Chemical Engineering Kinetics

(ChemE 7004)
Topic 5:
Steady-State Non-Isothermal Reactor Design

Prof. Wen-Yueh Yu ()
Catalysis and Surface Chemistry Lab
Department of Chemical Engineering
National Taiwan University
Topic 5 | Page 01
Non-Isothermal Reactor:
An Example
Consider a non-isothermal reactor for a highly exothermal reaction
(A B) in an adiabatic liquid-phase plug-flow reactor (PFR). Find
the reactor volume required for a given conversion.

Mole Balance (Design equation)

Rate Law where

Stoichiometry
Topic 5 | Page 02
Non-Isothermal Reactor:
An Example (contd)
Combination of rate law with stoichiometry

Combination with design equation

Energy Balance [for finding X(T) or V(T)],


e.g.,
Topic 5 | Page 03
Energy Balance:
First Law of Thermodynamics
Energy Work done Energy from
accumulation by system mass flow out

Heat from Energy from


surroundings mass flow in

Work:
shaft work
(e.g., produced by stirrer in
flow work CSTR or turbine in PFR)
Topic 5 | Page 04
Energy Balance:
First Law of Thermodynamics (contd)

For internal energy >> kinetic energy, potential energy

Enthalpy

or
Topic 5 | Page 05
Energy Balance:
Examples of Equations
Adiabatic (Q = 0), no WS, and constant CP

Fi 0 Ci 00 Ci 0 y
i i0
FA0 C A00 C A0 y A0

CSTR with heat exchanger

U: overall heat-transfer coefficient


A: area

PFR with heat exchanger


Topic 5 | Page 06
Energy Balance:
Heat of Reaction

steady state

Fi 0 Ci 00 Ci 0 y
i i0
FA0 C A00 C A0 y A0
Topic 5 | Page 08
Energy Balance:
Enthalpies and Heat Capacity
Topic 5 | Page 07
Heat of Reaction:
An Example
?

H oNH3 (298K) 11020 cal/mol


H oN 2 (298K) H oH 2 (298K) 0
H oRx (298K) 22040 cal/mol - N 2 reacted

C p 10.12 cal/mol - N 2 reacted

H Rx (423K) - 23.3 kcal/mol - N 2 reacted


- 7.8 kcal/mol - H 2 reacted
Topic 5 | Page 09
Energy Balance:
A Brief Summary

steady state
Topic 5 | Page 10
Adiabatic Operation -
Adiabatic Energy Balance

<<

Conversion based on energy balance (EB)


for adiabatic exothermic reaction
Topic 5 | Page 11
Adiabatic Operation -
Adiabatic Tubular Reactor
Elementary reversible gas-phase reaction (see Table 8-2A)

Mole balance

Rate law

Arrhenius equation

Van't Hoff equation

Stoichiometry

Energy balance equation

Numerical method or ODE solver (Table 8-2B) or hand calculation (Example 8-3)
Topic 5 | Page 12
Adiabatic Tubular Reactor:
Example 8.3
Liquid-phase isomerization of n-butane to i-butane
Set X = 0.2
Topic 5 | Page 13
Adiabatic Tubular Reactor:
Example 8.3 (contd)
Liquid-phase isomerization of n-butane to i-butane
EBE AE VHE RL RL

Levenspiel plot

Reactor volume
(V)
Simpson's rule
Topic 5 | Page 14
Adiabatic Tubular Reactor:
Example 8.3 (contd)
With ODE solver
Topic 5 | Page 15
Adiabatic Operation:
Example 8.3 - PFR versus CSTR
Comparison of the reactor volume for CSTR and PFR for X = 0.4.
Topic 5 | Page 16
Steady-State Tubular Reactor
With Heat Exchanger
c
m
Ta
FA0
T0 T

Variable Ta Variable Ta
Constant Ta Constant Ta Exothermic Exothermic
Exothermic Endothermic Counter-current Co-current
Topic 5 | Page 17
Equilibrium Conversion (Xe)

Equilibrium conversion (Xe):


Highest conversion that can be achieved in reversible reactions.
Exothermic reactions:
KC Xe For first-order reaction

T T
at equilibrium
Endothermic reactions:
KC ~1
Xe

T T
Topic 5 | Page 18
Equilibrium Conversion (Xe)
Adiabatically Exothermic Reactions

<<

X Energy
Equilibrium balance
T01 > T0
Energy
balance Xe (T01) < Xe (T01)
Xe
Tadiabatic (T01) >
Tadiabatic (T0)
T
T0 T01 TAdiabatic
Topic 5 | Page 19
Equilibrium Conversion (Xe)
Adiabatically Exothermic Reactions: Example 8-6
The elementary solid-catalyzed liquid-phase reaction A B
Adiabatically Exothermic Reactions Topic 5 | Page 20
Reactor Staging with Interstage Cooling
Increase Xe: (i) lower inlet temperature (slow kinetics); or
(ii) interstage cooling or heating (more investment)

(570, 0.9)
(700, 0.7)

(800, 0.4)
Adiabatically Endothermic Reactions Topic 5 | Page 21
Reactor Staging with Interstage Heating
Exothermic reactions Endothermic reactions
X X
XEB XEB

T T

Why not isothermal:


the temperature control is
difficult or expensive.
Why not higher To:
T safe concerns.
Adiabatically Endothermic Reactions Topic 5 | Page 22
Optimum Feed Temperature
Topic 5 | Page 23

CSTR with Heat Effects

and are negligible (or )

energy balance

mole balance
Topic 5 | Page 24
CSTR with Heat Effects
(contd)

non-adiabatic operation
Topic 5 | Page 25
Multiple Steady States
G(T) and R(T)

non-adiabatic operation

heat-generated term

heat-removed term

steady state = graphic intersection of G(T) and R(T)


Topic 5 | Page 26
Heat-Removed Term

Vary entering temperature Vary Non-Adiabatic Parameter

slope =

increase T0
increase

?
Topic 5 | Page 27
Heat-Generated Term

For 1st-order reaction

@ low T

@ high T
low E

increase
high E
Topic 5 | Page 28
Ignition-Extinction Curve

graphic intersection of G(T) and R(T) = steady state operation

G(T): curve y (independent of entering temp.)


R(T): straight line a with T01 as entering temp.
b with T02 as entering temp.
Ts1: steady-state reactor temp. determined from T01
Ts2 and Ts3: steady-state reactor temp. determined
from T02
Topic 5 | Page 29
Ignition-Extinction Curve
(contd)

Entering Stead-State
Temp. Reactor Temp.

a
b
c
d
e
f
Topic 5 | Page 30
Ignition-Extinction Curve
(contd)
Ignition-Extinction Curve

T05: ignition temperature


T02: extinction temperature
Topic 5 | Page 31
Ignition-Extinction Curve
(contd)
unstable

R(T), G(T)
T
stable

R(T), G(T)

T
Topic 5 | Page 32
Ignition-Extinction Curve
(contd)

unsteady state: 5 and 8


upper steady state: 3-12
lower steady state: 2-10

[Note] just locally stable, not globally stable


Topic 5 | Page 33
Runway Reactions in A CSTR

runaway
slope

At T*,
Topic 5 | Page 34
Runway Reactions in A CSTR
(contd)

Irreversible reaction and C C(T) or zeroth order kinetics


Topic 5 | Page 35
Runway Reactions in A CSTR
(contd)

If Trc > RT*2/E, transition to the upper steady state occur.

E/RT: typically 16-24


critical Trc: 15-30 oC
K: 300-500 K
Topic 5 | Page 36
Runway Reactions in A CSTR
Stability Diagram

runaway

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