This document discusses material balances, which are accounting methods for tracking material flows and changes in inventory within a defined system. A material balance equation equates the accumulation of material within a system over time to the material entering and leaving the system. Material balances can be used for mass, moles, chemical compounds, or atomic species. They help with process design, economic evaluation, process control, and optimization in chemical processes and plants.
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Material Balances 1
This document discusses material balances, which are accounting methods for tracking material flows and changes in inventory within a defined system. A material balance equation equates the accumulation of material within a system over time to the material entering and leaving the system. Material balances can be used for mass, moles, chemical compounds, or atomic species. They help with process design, economic evaluation, process control, and optimization in chemical processes and plants.
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PGE 405-PRINCIPLES OF PLANT DESIGN
MATERIAL BALANCES
ENGR JOSEPH CHIOR
INTRODUCTION • To make a material balance (or an energy balance ) for a process, you need to specify what the system is and outline its boundaries. • A process is one or a series of actions or operations or treatments that result in an end product. • Chemical engineering focuses on operations that cause physical and chemical change in materials. • Innumerable textbooks and reference books gives examples of processes as • Chemical manufacture • Fluid transport • Handling of bulk solids • Size reduction and enlargement • Heat generation and transport • Distillation • Gas absorption • Bioreactions Terminologies • By system we mean any arbitrary portion or whole of a process set out specifically for analysis. • Figure 2.1 shows a system in which flow and reaction take place; note particularly that the system boundary is formally circumscribed about the process itself to call attention to the importance of carefully delineating the system in each problem you work. • An open (or flow) system is one in which material is transferred across the system boundary, that is, enters the system, leaves the system, or both. • A closed (or batch) system is one in which there is no such transfer during the time interval of interest. • Obviously, if you charge a reactor with reactants and take out the products, and the reactor is designated as the system, material is transferred across the system boundary. • But you might ignore the transfer, and focus attention solely on the process of reaction that takes place only after charging is completed and before the products are withdrawn. • Such a process would occur within a closed system. • A material balance is nothing more than an accounting for material flows and changes in inventory of material for a system(Fig. 2.2) • Equation (2.1) describes in words the principle of the material balance applicable to processes both with and without chemical reaction: • As a generic term, material balance can refer to a balance on a system for the 1. Total mass 2. Total moles 3. Mass of a chemical compound 4. Mass of an atomic species 5. Moles of a chemical compound 6. Moles of an atomic species 7. Volume (possibly) • With respect to a total mass balance, the generation and consumption terms are zero whether a chemical reaction occurs in the system or not (we neglect the transfer between mass and energy in ordinary chemical processing); hence accumulation = input - output (2.2) • With respect to a balance on the total moles, if a chemical reaction does occur, you will most likely will have to take into account the generation or consumption terms. • In the absence of chemical reaction, the generation and consumption terms do not apply to a single chemical compound such as water or acetone; with a chemical reaction present in the system, the terms do apply. • From the viewpoint of both a mass balance or a mole balance for elements themselves, such as C, H, or O, the generation and consumption terms are not involved in a material balance. • Finally, Eq. (2.1) should not be applied to a balance on a volume of material unless ideal mixing occurs and the densities of the streams are the same. • In Eq. (2.1) the accumulation term refers to a change in mass or moles (plus or minus) within the system with respect to time. • Whereas the transfers through the system boundaries refer to inputs to and outputs of the system. • If Eq. (2.1) is written in symbols so that the variables are functions of time, the equation so formulated would be a differential equation. • As an example, the differential equation for the O2 material balance for the system illustrated in Fig. 2.1 might be written as • where nO2 within system denotes the moles of oxygen within the system boundary, and 𝑛𝑜2 denotes the rate at which oxygen enters, leaves or reacts, respectively, as indicated by the subscript. • Each term in the differential equation represents a rate with the units of, say, moles per unit time. • Problems formulated as differential equations with respect to time are called unsteady-state (or transient) problems. • In contrast, in steady-state problems the values of the variables in the system do not change with time, hence the accumulation term in Eq. (2.1) is zero by definition. • For convenience in treatment we use an integral balance form of Eq. (2.1). • What we do is to take as a basis a time period such as one hour or minute, and integrate Eq. (2.1a) with respect to time. • The derivative (the left hand side) in the differential equation becomes • where ∆𝑛 is the difference in the 𝑛𝑜2 within the system at t2 less that at t1. • A term on the right hand side of the differential equation becomes, as for example the first term, • If no accumulation occurs in a problem, and the generation and consumption terms can be omitted from consideration, the material balances reduce to the very simple relation • Material balances can be made for a wide variety of materials, at many scales of size for the system and in various degrees of complication. • In the process industries, material balances assist in the planning for process design, in the economic evaluation of proposed and existing processes, in process control, and in process optimization. • For example, in the extraction of soybean oil from soybeans, you could calculate the amount of solvent required per ton of soybeans or the time needed to fill up the filter press, and use this information in the design of equipment or in the evaluation of the economics of the process. • All sorts of raw materials can be used to produce the same end product, and quite a few different types of processing can achieve the same end result, so that case studies (simulations) of the processes can assist materially in the financial decisions that must be made. • Material balances are also used in the hourly and daily operating decisions of plant managers. • If there are one or more points in a process where it is impossible or uneconomical to collect data, then if sufficient 'other data are available, by making a material balance on the process it is possible to get the information you need about the quantities and compositions at the inaccessible location. • In most plants a mass of data is accumulated in data bases on the quantities and compositions of raw materials, intermediates, wastes products, and by-products that is used by the production and accounting departments, and that can be integrated into a revealing picture of company operations.