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Catalytic reactor design with axial dispersion

DESIGN OF NON-IDEAL HETEROGENEOUS PACKED CATALYTIC REACTORS WITH INTERPELLET AXIAL DISPERSION... [Pg.579]

Results from the previous section in this chapter illustrate how and when interpellet axial dispersion plays an important role in the design of packed catalytic tubular reactors. When diffusion is important, more sophisticated numerical techniques are required to solve second-order ODEs with split boundary conditions to predict non-ideal reactor performance. Tubular reactor performance is nonideal when the mass transfer Peclet number is small enough such that interpellet axial dispersion cannot be neglected. The objectives of this section are to understand the correlations for effective axial dispersion coefficients in packed beds and porous media and calculate the mass transfer Peclet number based on axial dispersion. Before one can make predictions about the ideal vs. non-ideal performance of tubular reactors, steady-state mass balances with and without axial dispersion must be solved and the reactant concentration profiles from both solutions must be compared. If the difference between these profiles with and without interpellet axial dispersion is indistinguishable, then the reactor operates ideally. [Pg.592]

In Chapter 2, the design of the so-called ideal reactors was discussed. The reactor ideahty was based on defined hydrodynamic behavior. We had assumedtwo flow patterns plug flow (piston type) where axial dispersion is excluded and completely mixed flow achieved in ideal stirred tank reactors. These flow patterns are often used for reactor design because the mass and heat balances are relatively simple to treat. But real equipment often deviates from that of the ideal flow pattern. In tubular reactors radial velocity and concentration profiles may develop in laminar flow. In turbulent flow, velocity fluctuations can lead to an axial dispersion. In catalytic packed bed reactors, irregular flow with the formation of channels may occur while stagnant fluid zones (dead zones) may develop in other parts of the reactor. Incompletely mixed zones and thus inhomogeneity can also be observed in CSTR, especially in the cases of viscous media. [Pg.89]


See other pages where Catalytic reactor design with axial dispersion is mentioned: [Pg.1]    [Pg.431]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.569]    [Pg.573]    [Pg.584]    [Pg.844]    [Pg.901]    [Pg.173]   


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