Revisiting the Role of Mass and Heat Transfer in Gas–Solid Catalytic Reactions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Mass and Heat Transfer in a Single Catalytic Particle
2.1. Diffusion with Reaction in a Single Catalytic Particle: Mass and Heat Balance Equations
2.2. Definition and Evolution of the Effectiveness Factor
- (a)
- a heat generation parameter:
- (b)
- the reaction rate exponential parameter:
2.3. Determination of the Effective Diffusional Coefficient Deff and the Effective Thermal Conductivity keff
2.4. External Gradients
2.5. Diffusion and Selectivity
 
      2.6. Effectiveness Factor for a Complex Reaction Network
2.7. An Example of Calculation of Effectiveness Factor Complex Reactions
- -
- Catalytic particle is spherical with uniform reactivity, density, and thermal conductivity.
- -
- The heat of reactions does not change with the temperature.
- -
- The external diffusion resistance is negligible, and therefore the surface concentration is equal to the one of the bulk.
- -
- The effective diffusivity has been assumed equal for all the involved chemical species.
3. Mass and Heat Transfer in Packed Bed Reactors: Long Range Gradients
3.1. Conservation Equations for Fixed-Bed Reactors: Mass and Energy Balances
3.2. External Transport Resistance and Particle Gradients
- -
- kg—gas-solid mass transfer coefficient (film);
- -
- L—characteristic length of particle (radius for spherical pellets);
- -
- ciS—surface concentration of component i;
- -
- ciP—particle internal concentration of component i;
- -
- Dei—effective diffusivity of component i into the particle;
- -
- x—particle radial coordinate;
- -
- ηj—effectiveness factor for reaction j;
- -
- vr,j—intrinsic rate of reaction j.
- -
- h—film heat transfer coefficient;
- -
- TS—temperature at the surface of the pellet;
- -
- TP—temperature inside the pellet;
- -
- Keff—effective thermal conductivity of the catalytic particle.
- -
- εP—catalytic particle void fraction;
- -
- ρP—catalytic particle density;
- -
- CPP—catalytic particle specific heat.
3.3. Conservation Equations in Dimensionless Form and Possible Simplification
- -
- dP—particle diameter;
- -
- R—fixed-bed reactor radius;
- -
- Z—fixed-bed reactor length;
- -
- cB(in)i—reactor inlet concentration;
- -
- TB(in)—reactor inlet temperature.
3.4. Examples of Applications
3.4.1. Isothermal Conditions
3.4.2. Adiabatic Conditions
- -
- G—mass velocity;
- -
- cross section of the reactor tube;
- -
- FA, F0A component molar flow rate;
- -
- —reaction rate for reaction j based on catalyst mass.
4. Non-Isothermic and Non-Adiabatic Conditions
4.1. Conversion of o-Xylene to Phthalic Anhydride
 
      - No axial and radial dispersion;
- No radial temperature and concentration gradients in the reactor body;
- Plug flow behavior of the reactor;
- No limitation related to internal diffusion in catalytic particles.
- -
- Q—volumetric overall flow rate;
- -
- A—cross section of the reactor tube;
- -
- Dr—reactor diameter;
- -
- Fi—component molar flow rate;
- -
- yi—mole fraction of component i;
- -
- mI—mass of inert per unit mass of catalyst (dilution ratio);
- -
- —reaction rate for reaction j based on catalyst mass.
- -
- G—mass velocity;
- -
- MF—average molecular weight of mixture.
4.2. Conversion of Methanol to Formaldehyde
- Negligible dispersion in axial and radial directions;
- Absence of concentration and temperature profiles along the reactor radius;
- Plug flow reactor behavior.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Glossary
| List of Symbols | |
| am | Specific surface area | 
| A | Reactor cross section | 
| bw | Water adsorption equilibrium constant | 
| c | Generic concentration | 
| ci | Concentration of component i | 
| ci° | Initial i concentration | 
| cb | Generic concentration of a component in the bulk | 
| ciB | Concentration of i in the bulk | 
| ciP | Concentration of i inside a catalytic particle | 
| cS | Generic concentration at the catalytic surface | 
| ciS | Concentration of i at the surface | 
| Cp | Average gas specific heat | 
| CpP | Particle specific heat | 
| Δc | Concentration gradient | 
| Δcmin | Minimum concentration gradient | 
| D | Reactor diameter | 
| dp | Particle diameter | 
| D | Generic molecular diffusivity | 
| Di | Molecular diffusivity of component i | 
| Di,j | Mutual binary diffusion coefficient | 
| D12 | Mutual binary diffusion coefficient | 
| Dim | Diffusion coefficient of i in a mixture m | 
| Deff | Effective molecular diffusivity | 
| (Di)eff | Effective molecular diffusivity of component i | 
| Dbe | Bulk diffusion coefficient | 
| Dke | Knudsen diffusion coefficient | 
| Dei | Effective diffusivity inside particle | 
| Dai | Axial diffusivity of component i | 
| Dri | Radial diffusivity of component i | 
| Fi | Molar flow rate of component i | 
| F | Overall molar flow rate | 
| G | Mass velocity | 
| h | Film heat transfer coefficient | 
| hw | Wall heat transfer coefficient | 
| ΔH | Generic reaction enthalpy | 
| ΔHj | Enthalpy of reaction j | 
| Ji | Molar flux of component i | 
| JD, JH | Terms for mass and heat transfer analogy | 
| k, ki | Generic kinetic constant | 
| kB | Boltzmann’s constant | 
| kT | Generic thermal conductivity of the fluid | 
| kf | Thermal conductivity of the bulk | 
| keff | Effective thermal conductivity | 
| kSol | Thermal conductivity of the solid | 
| Ka | Axial thermal conductivity | 
| Kr | Radial thermal conductivity | 
| Ke | Particle thermal conductivity | 
| kS | Kinetic constant | 
| kc | Film mass transfer coefficients (concentration gradient) | 
| kg | Film mass transfer coefficients (pressure gradient) | 
| km | Mass transfer coefficient | 
| L | Characteristic length | 
| Le | Lewis’s number | 
| m | Radial aspect ratio | 
| mI | Inert dilution ratio | 
| M, Mi | Molecular weight | 
| MF | Average molecular weight of the mixture | 
| Mw | Weisz modulus | 
| NC | Number of components | 
| Nre | Number of reactions | 
| Nr | Molar flux | 
| Ni, NA | Molar flux | 
| N | Number of nodes | 
| n | Reaction order | 
| P | Total pressure | 
| Pm | Methanol partial pressure | 
| Pf | Formaldehyde partial pressure | 
| Pw | Water partial pressure | 
| PO2 | Oxygen partial pressure | 
| Pma | Axial Peclet’s number for mass | 
| Pmr | Radial Peclet’s number for mass | 
| Pha | Axial Peclet’s number for heat | 
| Phr | Radial Peclet’s number for heat | 
| Pr | Prandtl’s number | 
| Q | Rate of heat transfer | 
| Qv | Overall volumetric flow rate | 
| q | Heat flux | 
| r | Reactor radial coordinate | 
| rP | Particle spherical radius | 
| R | Gas constant | 
| Rr | Reactor radius | 
| Rni | Reaction rate at node i | 
| Rj | Reaction rate (fluid volume) | 
| Reaction rate (catalyst mass) | |
| rcj | Intrinsic reaction rate | 
| Re | Reynold’s number | 
| Sv | Specific surface area | 
| Sh | Sherwood’s number | 
| Sc | Schmidt’s number | 
| S | Selectivity | 
| Sg | Specific surface area | 
| T | Generic temperature | 
| TS | Temperature at particle surface | 
| TP | Temperature inside the particle | 
| Tb | Bulk temperature | 
| Tc | Cooling fluid temperature | 
| ΔTmax | Maximum temperature difference | 
| t | Time | 
| u | Velocity | 
| uz | Velocity in z direction | 
| U | Overall heat transfer coefficient | 
| vr | Reaction rate | 
| vr,i | Reaction rate, reaction i-th | 
| vr,jG | Reaction rate (pellet volume) | 
| Vci | Critical volume of component i | 
| x | Particle radial coordinate | 
| Xi | Fractional conversion | 
| yi | Gas phase mole fraction component i | 
| z | Axial reactor coordinate | 
| Z | Reactor length | 
| Greek Letters | |
| αA | Constant in Equation (89) | 
| αB | Constant in Equation (89) | 
| αE | Reaction rate exponential parameter | 
| αJ | Constant in Equation (38) | 
| αH | Constant in Equation (40) | 
| β | Prater’s number | 
| βJ | Constant in Equation (38) | 
| βH | Constant in Equation (40) | 
| γdr | Dimensionless concentration | 
| γij | Stoichiometric coefficient | 
| δ | Thickness of boundary layer | 
| εdr | Dimensionless radius | 
| εB | Bed void fraction | 
| εBs | Bed void fraction of the solid | 
| εJ | Constant in Equation (38) | 
| εH | Constant in Equation (40) | 
| εij | Interaction parameter | 
| εp | Particle void fraction | 
| η, ηj | Effectiveness factor | 
| µ | Viscosity | 
| θ | Porosity of the solid | 
| ρ | Average gas density | 
| ρp | Particle density | 
| ρd | Intermolecular distance | 
| σij | Kinetic diameter | 
| τ | Tortuosity factor | 
| ϕ | Thiele modulus | 
| ϕLJ | Lennard–Jones potential | 
| ydr | Dimensionless reaction rate | 
| ΩD | Collision integral | 
| Nabla operator | |
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| Ke = 2.72 × 10−4 | KJ/(s m K) | effective thermal conductivity | 
| De = 1.07 × 10−5 exp(-672/T) | m2/s | effective diffusivity | 
| ρP = 1180 | Kg/m3 | particle density | 
| Cp = 2.5 | KJ/(mole K) | particle specific heat | 
| P = 1.68 | atm | total pressure | 
| TS = 539 | K | surface temperature | 
| dP = 3.5 × 10−3 | m | particle diameter | 
| Bulk gas composition | mol% | |
| CH3OH | 9.0 | |
| O2 | 10.0 | |
| CH2O | 0.5 | |
| H2O | 2.0 | |
| CO | 1.0 | |
| N2 | 77.5 | |
| k1 = 5.37 × 102 exp(-7055/T) | 
| k2 = 6.42 × 10−5 exp(-1293/T) | 
| a1 = 5.68 × 102 exp(-1126/T) | 
| a2 = 8.37 × 10−5 exp(7124/T) | 
| b1 = 6.45 × 10−9 exp(12,195/T) | 
| b2 = 2.84 × 10−3 exp(4803/T) | 
| ΔH1 = 37,480 cal/mole | 
| ΔH2 = 56,520 cal/mole | 
| Reactor Conditions | Aspect Ratio Criteria | Left-Hand Side of Equations (71) and (72) | 
|---|---|---|
| Isothermal | ||
| Adiabatic | ||
| Non-isothermal and non-adiabatic | ||
| r1 = k1 POX PO (Kmol/Kg-cat h) | ln k1= −27,000/RT + 19.837 | 
| r2 = k2 PPA PO (Kmol/Kg-cat h) | ln k2= −31,000/RT + 20.860 | 
| r3 = k3 POX PO (Kmol/Kg-cat h) | ln k3= −28,600/RT + 18.970 | 
| ΔH1 = −307 Kcal/mol | |
| ΔH2 = −783 Kcal/mol | |
| ΔH3= −1090 Kcal/mol | |
| U = 82.7 Kcal/ m2 h °C | overall heat transfer coefficient | 
| D = 0.025 m | reactor diameter | 
| Z = 3 m | reactor length | 
| dP = 0.003 m | particle diameter | 
| CP = 0.25 Kcal/Kg °C | average specific heat | 
| ρB =1300 Kg/m3 | bulk density of the bed | 
| Feed composition: | yOX = 0.0093 | 
| yO = 0.208 | |
| Feed molar flow rate | F = 0.779 moles/h | 
| Inert dilution of the catalyst | mI =0.5 for the first quarter | 
| Inlet temperature | T0 = 370 °C | 
| Inlet temperature | 539 K | 
| Total pressure | 1.68 atm | 
| Bulk density of the bed | 0.88 Kg/m3 | 
| Overall heat transfer coefficient U | 0.171 KJ/(m2 s K) | 
| Heating medium temperature | 544 K | 
| Reactor diameter | 2.54 x 10−2 m | 
| Particles diameter | 3.5 x 10−3 m | 
| Reactor length | 0.35 m | 
| Gas inlet composition | mol % | 
| CH3OH | 9 | 
| O2 | 10 | 
| CH2O | 0.5 | 
| H2O | 2 | 
| CO | 1 | 
| N2 | 77.5 | 
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Tesser, R.; Santacesaria, E. Revisiting the Role of Mass and Heat Transfer in Gas–Solid Catalytic Reactions. Processes 2020, 8, 1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr8121599
Tesser R, Santacesaria E. Revisiting the Role of Mass and Heat Transfer in Gas–Solid Catalytic Reactions. Processes. 2020; 8(12):1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr8121599
Chicago/Turabian StyleTesser, Riccardo, and Elio Santacesaria. 2020. "Revisiting the Role of Mass and Heat Transfer in Gas–Solid Catalytic Reactions" Processes 8, no. 12: 1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr8121599
APA StyleTesser, R., & Santacesaria, E. (2020). Revisiting the Role of Mass and Heat Transfer in Gas–Solid Catalytic Reactions. Processes, 8(12), 1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr8121599
 
        


 
                         
       