Chapter 1 Heterogen
Chapter 1 Heterogen
Heterogeneous
Reactions-Introduction
The second half of this book treats the kinetics and design of chemical reactors
for heterogeneous systems of various kinds, each chapter considering a different
system (see Chapter 1 for discussions of heterogeneous and homogeneous sys-
tems). For these systems there are two complicating factors that must be ac-
counted for beyond what is normally considered in homogeneous systems. First,
we have the complication of the rate expression, and second the complication
of the contacting patterns for two-phase systems. Let us briefly discuss these
in turn.
The Complications of the Rate Equation. Since more than one phase is present,
the movement of material from phase to phase must be considered in the rate
equation. Thus the rate expression in general will incorporate mass transfer
terms in addition to the usual chemical kinetics term. These mass transfer terms
are different in type and numbers in the different kinds of heterogeneous systems;
hence, no single rate expression has general application. Here are some sim-
ple examples.
Tell how many rate steps are involved. The kinetics is given by
C + O,+CO,
From Fig. E17.1 we see that two steps in series are involved-mass transfer of
oxygen to the surface followed by reaction at the surface of the particle.
369
370 Chapter 17 Heterogeneous Reactions-Introduction
J'
r,sJ;,.
' 3 2
-
Model
Fig. E17.1
AEROBIC FERMENTATION
w many rate steps are involved when air bubbles through a tank of liquid
product material.
From Fig. E17.2 we see that there are up to seven possible resistance steps, only
one involving the reaction. How many you choose to consider depends on you
and on the situation.
To get an overall rate expression, write the individual rate steps on the same
basis (unit surface of burning particle, unit volume of fermenter, unit volume of
cells, etc.).
1d N A - mol A reacted
-rL= S dt interfacial surface. time
Now put all the mass transfer and reaction steps into the same rate form and
then combine. Thus
mol A reacted -
- (-rA)v = ( - r i ) W = (-rL)S
time
roverall = r1 = r2 = r3
Consider steps in series. In general, if all the steps are linear in concentration,
then it is easy to combine them. However, if any of the steps are nonlinear, then
you will get a messy overall expression. Therefore, you may try to bypass this
nonlinear step in one of various ways. Approximating the r, versus C, curve by
a first-order expression is probably the most useful procedure.
Another point: in combining rates we normally do not know the concentration
of materials at intermediate conditions, so these are the concentrations that we
eliminate in combining rates. Example 17.3 shows this.
372 Chapter 17 Heterogeneous Reactions-Introduction
Dilute A diffuses through a stagnant liquid film onto a plane surface consisting
of B, reacts there to produce R which diffuses back into the mainstream. Develop
the overall rate expression for the L/S reaction
Figure E17.3.
SOLUTION
At steady state the flow rate to the surface is equal to the reaction rate at the
surface (steps in series). So
from which
(iii)
Replacing Eq. (iii) into either Eq. (i) or Eq. (ii) then eliminates C, which cannot
be measured, giving
Comment This result shows that llk, and llk" are additive resistances. It so
happens that the addition of resistances to obtain on overall resistance is permissi-
ble only when the rate is a linear function of the driving force and when the
processes occur in series.
Repeat Example 17.3 with just one change: let the reaction step be second order
with respect to A, or
1 SOLUTION
Combining the reaction steps to eliminate C, as was done in Example 17.3, is
now not so simple, and gives
Micro-micro
Reaction in either
A or B phase
Reaction in either
PROBLEMS
17.1. Gaseous reactant A diffuses through a gas film and reacts on the surface
of a solid according to a reversible first-order rate,
17.3. In slurry reactors, pure reactant gas is bubbled through liquid containing
suspended catalyst particles. Let us view these kinetics in terms of the film
theory, as shown in Fig. P17.3. Thus, to reach the surface of the solid, the
Typical liquid-
Figure P17.3
reactant which enters the liquid must diffuse through the liquid film into
the main body of liquid, and then through the film surrounding the catalyst
particle. At the surface of the particle, reactant yields product according
to first-order kinetics. Derive an expression for the rate of reaction in terms
of these resistances.