In chemical engineering, Chemical Reactors are vessels designed to contain chemical reactions. One example is a pressure reactor.The design of a Chemical Reactor deals with multiple aspects of chemical engineering.Chemical engineers design reactors to maximize net present value for the given reaction.
Designers ensure that the reaction proceeds with the highest efficiency towards the desired output product, producing the highest yield of product while requiring the least amount of money to purchase and operate.Normal operating expenses include energy input, energy removal, raw material costs, labor, etc.Energy changes can come in the form of heating or cooling, pumping to increase pressure, frictional pressure loss (such as pressure drop across a 90° elbow or an orifice plate) or agitation.
Chemical reaction engineering is the branch of chemical engineering which deals with chemical reactors and their design, especially by application of chemical kinetics to industrial systems.
A pipe or tubular reactor (laminar flow reactor (LFR)) Both types can be used as continuous reactors or batch reactors, and either may accommodate one or more solids (reagents, catalyst, or inert materials), but the reagents and products are typically fluids.
Most commonly, reactors are run at steady-state, but can also be operated in a transient state. When a reactor is first brought into operation (after maintenance or inoperation) it would be considered to be in a transient state, where key process variables change with time.
Furthermore, catalytic reactors require separate treatment, whether they are batch, CST, or PF reactors, as the many assumptions of the simpler models are not valid.
Key process variables includeA chemical reactor, typically tubular reactor, could be a packed bed.The packing inside the bed may have catalyst to catalyze the chemical reaction or may also be a fluidized bed
Chemical reactions occurring in a reactor may be exothermic, meaning giving off heat, or endothermic, meaning absorbing heat. A chemical reactor vessel may have a cooling or heating jacket or cooling or heating coils (tubes) wrapped around the outside of its vessel wall to cool down or heat up the contents.
A semi-batch reactor is operated with both continuous and batch inputs and outputs. A fermenter, for example, is loaded with a batch of medium and microbes which constantly produce carbon dioxide that must remove continuously.
Analogously, driving a reaction of gas with a liquid is usually difficult, since the gas bubbles off. Therefore, a continuous feed of gas is injected into the batch of a liquid.
One chemical reactant is charged to the vessel and a second chemical is added slowly (for instance, to prevent side reactions).
Although catalytic reactors are often implemented as plug flow reactors, their analysis requires more complicated treatment.
The rate of a catalytic reaction is proportional to the amount of catalyst the reagents contact, as well as the concentration of the reactants.
With a solid phase catalyst and fluid phase reagents, this is proportional to the exposed area, efficiency of diffusion of reagents in and products out, and efficacy of mixing.
Perfect mixing usually cannot be assumed.
Furthermore, a catalytic reaction pathway often occurs in multiple steps with intermediates that are chemically bound to the catalyst; and as the chemical binding to the catalyst is also a chemical reaction, it may affect the kinetics.
Catalytic reactions often display the so-called falsified kinetics, i.e. the apparent kinetics differs from elementary chemical kinetics due to physical transport effects. The behavior of the catalyst is also a consideration.
Particularly in high-temperature petrochemical processes, catalysts are deactivated by sintering, coking, and similar processes.
A common example of a catalytic reactor is the catalytic converter following an engine.
However, most petrochemical reactors are catalytic, and are responsible for most of industrial chemical production in the world, with extremely high-volume examples such as sulfuric acid, ammonia, reformate/BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethyl benzene and xylene) and alkylate gasoline blending stock.
In a CSTR, one or more fluid reagents are introduced into a tank reactor (typically) equipped with an impeller while the reactor effluent is removed.
The impeller stirs the reagents to ensure proper mixing. Simply dividing the volume of the tank by the average volumetric flow rate through the tank gives the residence time, or the average amount of time a discrete quantity of reagent spends inside the tank.Using chemical kinetics, the reaction's expected percent completion can be calculated.
Some important aspects of the CSTR:At steady-state, the mass flow rate in must equal the mass flow rate out; otherwise the tank will overflow or go empty (transient state).While the reactor is in a transient state the model equation must be derived from the differential mass and energy balances.
The reaction proceeds at the reaction rate associated with the final (output) concentration, since the concentration is assumed to be homogenous throughout the reactor.Often, it is economically beneficial to operate several CSTRs in series.
This allows, for example, the first CSTR to operate at a higher reagent concentration and therefore a higher reaction rate. In these cases, the sizes of the reactors may be varied in order to minimize the total capital investment required to implement the process.It can be demonstrated that an infinite number of infinitely small CSTRs operating in series would be equivalent to a PFR.
The behavior of a CSTR is often approximated or modeled by that of a Continuous Ideally Stirred-Tank Reactor (CISTR).
All calculations performed with CISTRs assume perfect mixing.
If the residence time is 5-10 times the mixing time, this approximation is considered valid for engineering purposes.
The CISTR model is often used to simplify engineering calculations and can be used to describe research reactors.
In practice it can only be approached, particularly in industrial size reactors in which the mixing time may be very large.