Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Global isotherm, nonlinearity

Composite Sorption Magnitude and Isotherm Nonlinearity. Accurate assessment of the extent to which the global isotherm for a system is nonlinear is important for accurate portrayal of sorption processes in that system. From a practical point of view, the extrapolation of linear approximations of weakly nonlinear or near-linear sorption isotherms to concentration ranges beyond which they are valid can result in significant errors in projections of contaminant fate and transport (1). From a conceptual point of view, observations of isotherm nonlinearity over specific concentration ranges may be employed in conjunction with models such as the DRM to probe and evaluate the extent to which multiple sorption mechanisms are operative in a particular system. [Pg.375]

The results confirm that the adsorption of ammonia is very fast and that ammonia is strongly adsorbed on the catalyst surface. The data were analyzed by a dynamic isothermal plug flow reactor model and estimates of the relevant kinetic parameters were obtained by global nonlinear regression over the entire set of runs. The influences of both intra-particle and external mass transfer limitations were estimated to be negligible, on the basis of theoretical diagnostic criteria. [Pg.402]

The transient response experiments were analyzed by a dynamic isothermal PFR model, and estimates of the relevant kinetic parameters were obtained by global nonlinear regression over all runs. It was found that a simple Langmuir approach could not represent the data accurately, and surface heterogeneity had to be invoked. The best fit was obtained using a Temkin-type adsorption isotherm with coverage-dependent desorption energy ... [Pg.139]


See other pages where Global isotherm, nonlinearity is mentioned: [Pg.1709]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.9]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.375 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.375 ]




SEARCH



Isotherm nonlinear

© 2024 chempedia.info