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Mass balance

In physics, a mass balance, also called a material balance, is an application of conservation of mass to the analysis of physical systems. By accounting for material entering and leaving a system, mass flows can be identified which might have been unknown, or difficult to measure without this technique. The exact conservation law used in the analysis of the system depends on the context of the problem, but all revolve around mass conservation, i.e., that matter cannot disappear or be created spontaneously.[1]: 59–62 

Therefore, mass balances are used widely in engineering and environmental analyses. For example, mass balance theory is used to design chemical reactors, to analyse alternative processes to produce chemicals, as well as to model pollution dispersion and other processes of physical systems. Closely related and complementary analysis techniques include the population balance, energy balance and the somewhat more complex entropy balance. These techniques are required for thorough design and analysis of systems such as the refrigeration cycle.

In environmental monitoring, the term budget calculations is used to describe mass balance equations where they are used to evaluate the monitoring data (comparing input and output, etc.). In biology, the dynamic energy budget theory for metabolic organisation makes explicit use of mass and energy balance.

Introduction Edit

The general form quoted for a mass balance is The mass that enters a system must, by conservation of mass, either leave the system or accumulate within the system.

Mathematically the mass balance for a system without a chemical reaction is as follows:[1]: 59–62 

 

Strictly speaking the above equation holds also for systems with chemical reactions if the terms in the balance equation are taken to refer to total mass, i.e. the sum of all the chemical species of the system. In the absence of a chemical reaction the amount of any chemical species flowing in and out will be the same; this gives rise to an equation for each species present in the system. However, if this is not the case then the mass balance equation must be amended to allow for the generation or depletion (consumption) of each chemical species. Some use one term in this equation to account for chemical reactions, which will be negative for depletion and positive for generation. However, the conventional form of this equation is written to account for both a positive generation term (i.e. product of reaction) and a negative consumption term (the reactants used to produce the products). Although overall one term will account for the total balance on the system, if this balance equation is to be applied to an individual species and then the entire process, both terms are necessary. This modified equation can be used not only for reactive systems, but for population balances such as arise in particle mechanics problems. The equation is given below; note that it simplifies to the earlier equation in the case that the generation term is zero.[1]: 59–62 

 
  • In the absence of a nuclear reaction the number of atoms flowing in and out must remain the same, even in the presence of a chemical reaction.
  • For a balance to be formed, the boundaries of the system must be clearly defined.
  • Mass balances can be taken over physical systems at multiple scales.
  • Mass balances can be simplified with the assumption of steady state, in which the accumulation term is zero.

Illustrative example Edit

 
Diagram showing clarifier example

A simple example can illustrate the concept. Consider the situation in which a slurry is flowing into a settling tank to remove the solids in the tank. Solids are collected at the bottom by means of a conveyor belt partially submerged in the tank, and water exits via an overflow outlet.

In this example, there are two substances: solids and water. The water overflow outlet carries an increased concentration of water relative to solids, as compared to the slurry inlet, and the exit of the conveyor belt carries an increased concentration of solids relative to water.

Assumptions

  • Steady state
  • Non-reactive system

Analysis

Suppose that the slurry inlet composition (by mass) is 50% solid and 50% water, with a mass flow of 100 kg/min. The tank is assumed to be operating at steady state, and as such accumulation is zero, so input and output must be equal for both the solids and water. If we know that the removal efficiency for the slurry tank is 60%, then the water outlet will contain 20 kg/min of solids (40% times 100 kg/min times 50% solids). If we measure the flow rate of the combined solids and water, and the water outlet is shown to be 65 kg/min, then the amount of water exiting via the conveyor belt must be kg/min. This allows us to completely determine how the mass has been distributed in the system with only limited information and using the mass balance relations across the system boundaries. The mass balance for this system can be described in a tabular form:

Mass balance for Clarifier
Stream
Material Clarifier Inlet Clarified Water Outlet Extracted Solids
Solids 50 kg/min 20 kg/min 30 kg/min
Water 50 kg/min 45 kg/min 5 kg/min
Total 100 kg/min 65 kg/min 35 kg/min

Mass feedback (recycle) Edit

 
Cooling towers are a good example of a recycle system

Mass balances can be performed across systems which have cyclic flows. In these systems output streams are fed back into the input of a unit, often for further reprocessing.[1]: 97–105 

Such systems are common in grinding circuits, where grain is crushed then sieved to only allow fine particles out of the circuit and the larger particles are returned to the roller mill (grinder). However, recycle flows are by no means restricted to solid mechanics operations; they are used in liquid and gas flows, as well. One such example is in cooling towers, where water is pumped through a tower many times, with only a small quantity of water drawn off at each pass (to prevent solids build up) until it has either evaporated or exited with the drawn off water. The mass balance for water is M = D + W + E.

The use of the recycle aids in increasing overall conversion of input products, which is useful for low per-pass conversion processes (such as the Haber process).

Differential mass balances Edit

A mass balance can also be taken differentially. The concept is the same as for a large mass balance, but it is performed in the context of a limiting system (for example, one can consider the limiting case in time or, more commonly, volume). A differential mass balance is used to generate differential equations that can provide an effective tool for modelling and understanding the target system.

The differential mass balance is usually solved in two steps: first, a set of governing differential equations must be obtained, and then these equations must be solved, either analytically or, for less tractable problems, numerically.

The following systems are good examples of the applications of the differential mass balance:

  1. Ideal (stirred) batch reactor
  2. Ideal tank reactor, also named Continuous Stirred Tank Reactor (CSTR)
  3. Ideal Plug Flow Reactor (PFR)

Ideal batch reactor Edit

The ideal completely mixed batch reactor is a closed system. Isothermal conditions are assumed, and mixing prevents concentration gradients as reactant concentrations decrease and product concentrations increase over time.[2]: 40–41  Many chemistry textbooks implicitly assume that the studied system can be described as a batch reactor when they write about reaction kinetics and chemical equilibrium. The mass balance for a substance A becomes

 

where

  • rA denotes the rate at which substance A is produced;
  • V is the volume (which may be constant or not);
  • nA the number of moles (n) of substance A.

In a fed-batch reactor some reactants/ingredients are added continuously or in pulses (compare making porridge by either first blending all ingredients and then letting it boil, which can be described as a batch reactor, or by first mixing only water and salt and making that boil before the other ingredients are added, which can be described as a fed-batch reactor). Mass balances for fed-batch reactors become a bit more complicated.

Reactive example Edit

In the first example, we will show how to use a mass balance to derive a relationship between the percent excess air for the combustion of a hydrocarbon-base fuel oil and the percent oxygen in the combustion product gas. First, normal dry air contains 0.2095 mol of oxygen per mole of air, so there is one mole of O
2
in 4.773 mol of dry air. For stoichiometric combustion, the relationships between the mass of air and the mass of each combustible element in a fuel oil are:

 

Considering the accuracy of typical analytical procedures, an equation for the mass of air per mass of fuel at stoichiometric combustion is:

 

where wC, wH, wS, wO refer to the mass fraction of each element in the fuel oil, sulfur burning to SO2, and AFRmass refers to the air-fuel ratio in mass units.

For kg of fuel oil containing 86.1% C, 13.6% H, 0.2% O, and 0.1% S the stoichiometric mass of air is 14.56 kg, so AFR = 14.56. The combustion product mass is then 15.56 kg. At exact stoichiometry, O
2
should be absent. At 15 percent excess air, the AFR = 16.75, and the mass of the combustion product gas is 17.75 kg, which contains 0.505 kg of excess oxygen. The combustion gas thus contains 2.84 percent O
2
by mass. The relationships between percent excess air and %O
2
in the combustion gas are accurately expressed by quadratic equations, valid over the range 0–30 percent excess air:

 

In the second example, we will use the law of mass action to derive the expression for a chemical equilibrium constant.

Assume we have a closed reactor in which the following liquid phase reversible reaction occurs:

 

The mass balance for substance A becomes

 

As we have a liquid phase reaction we can (usually) assume a constant volume and since   we get

 

or

 

In many textbooks this is given as the definition of reaction rate without specifying the implicit assumption that we are talking about reaction rate in a closed system with only one reaction. This is an unfortunate mistake that has confused many students over the years.

According to the law of mass action the forward reaction rate can be written as

 

and the backward reaction rate as

 

The rate at which substance A is produced is thus

 

and since, at equilibrium, the concentration of A is constant we get

 

or, rearranged

 

Ideal tank reactor/continuously stirred tank reactor Edit

The continuously mixed tank reactor is an open system with an influent stream of reactants and an effluent stream of products.[2]: 41  A lake can be regarded as a tank reactor, and lakes with long turnover times (e.g. with low flux-to-volume ratios) can for many purposes be regarded as continuously stirred (e.g. homogeneous in all respects). The mass balance then becomes

 


where

  • Q0 is the volumetric flow into the system;
  • Q is the volumetric flow out of the system;
  • CA,0 is the concentration of A in the inflow;
  • CA is the concentration of A in the outflow.

In an open system we can never reach a chemical equilibrium. We can, however, reach a steady state where all state variables (temperature, concentrations, etc.) remain constant (ACC = 0).

Example Edit

Consider a bathtub in which there is some bathing salt dissolved. We now fill in more water, keeping the bottom plug in. What happens?

Since there is no reaction, PROD = 0 and since there is no outflow Q = 0. The mass balance becomes

 

or

 

Using a mass balance for total volume, however, it is evident that  and that   Thus we get

 

Note that there is no reaction and hence no reaction rate or rate law involved, and yet  . We can thus draw the conclusion that reaction rate can not be defined in a general manner using  . One must first write down a mass balance before a link between   and the reaction rate can be found. Many textbooks, however, define reaction rate as

 

without mentioning that this definition implicitly assumes that the system is closed, has a constant volume and that there is only one reaction.

Ideal plug flow reactor (PFR) Edit

The idealized plug flow reactor is an open system resembling a tube with no mixing in the direction of flow but perfect mixing perpendicular to the direction of flow, often used for systems like rivers and water pipes if the flow is turbulent. When a mass balance is made for a tube, one first considers an infinitesimal part of the tube and make a mass balance over that using the ideal tank reactor model.[2]: 46–47  That mass balance is then integrated over the entire reactor volume to obtain:

 

In numeric solutions, e.g. when using computers, the ideal tube is often translated to a series of tank reactors, as it can be shown that a PFR is equivalent to an infinite number of stirred tanks in series, but the latter is often easier to analyze, especially at steady state.

More complex problems Edit

In reality, reactors are often non-ideal, in which combinations of the reactor models above are used to describe the system. Not only chemical reaction rates, but also mass transfer rates may be important in the mathematical description of a system, especially in heterogeneous systems.[3]

As the chemical reaction rate depends on temperature it is often necessary to make both an energy balance (often a heat balance rather than a full-fledged energy balance) as well as mass balances to fully describe the system. A different reactor model might be needed for the energy balance: A system that is closed with respect to mass might be open with respect to energy e.g. since heat may enter the system through conduction.

Commercial use Edit

In industrial process plants, using the fact that the mass entering and leaving any portion of a process plant must balance, data validation and reconciliation algorithms may be employed to correct measured flows, provided that enough redundancy of flow measurements exist to permit statistical reconciliation and exclusion of detectably erroneous measurements. Since all real world measured values contain inherent error, the reconciled measurements provide a better basis than the measured values do for financial reporting, optimization, and regulatory reporting. Software packages exist to make this commercially feasible on a daily basis.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Himmelblau, David M. (1967). Basic Principles and Calculations in Chemical Engineering (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall.
  2. ^ a b c Weber, Walter J., Jr. (1972). Physicochemical Processes for Water Quality Control. Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 0-471-92435-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Perry, Robert H.; Chilton, Cecil H.; Kirkpatrick, Sidney D. (1963). Chemical Engineers' Handbook (fourth ed.). McGraw-Hill. pp. 4–21.

External links Edit

  • Heat and material balance method of process control for petrochemical plants and oil refineries, United States Patent 6751527
  • Morris, Arthur E.; Geiger, Gordon; Fine, H. Alan (2011). Handbook on Material and Energy Balance Calculations in Material Processing (3rd ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-1-118-06565-5.

mass, balance, material, balance, redirects, here, method, economic, planning, material, balance, planning, device, used, compare, masses, weighing, scale, balance, physics, mass, balance, also, called, material, balance, application, conservation, mass, analy. Material balance redirects here For the method of economic planning see Material balance planning For the device used to compare two masses see Weighing scale Balance In physics a mass balance also called a material balance is an application of conservation of mass to the analysis of physical systems By accounting for material entering and leaving a system mass flows can be identified which might have been unknown or difficult to measure without this technique The exact conservation law used in the analysis of the system depends on the context of the problem but all revolve around mass conservation i e that matter cannot disappear or be created spontaneously 1 59 62 Therefore mass balances are used widely in engineering and environmental analyses For example mass balance theory is used to design chemical reactors to analyse alternative processes to produce chemicals as well as to model pollution dispersion and other processes of physical systems Closely related and complementary analysis techniques include the population balance energy balance and the somewhat more complex entropy balance These techniques are required for thorough design and analysis of systems such as the refrigeration cycle In environmental monitoring the term budget calculations is used to describe mass balance equations where they are used to evaluate the monitoring data comparing input and output etc In biology the dynamic energy budget theory for metabolic organisation makes explicit use of mass and energy balance Contents 1 Introduction 2 Illustrative example 3 Mass feedback recycle 4 Differential mass balances 4 1 Ideal batch reactor 4 1 1 Reactive example 4 2 Ideal tank reactor continuously stirred tank reactor 4 2 1 Example 4 3 Ideal plug flow reactor PFR 5 More complex problems 6 Commercial use 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksIntroduction EditThe general form quoted for a mass balance is The mass that enters a system must by conservation of mass either leave the system or accumulate within the system Mathematically the mass balance for a system without a chemical reaction is as follows 1 59 62 Input Output Accumulation displaystyle text Input text Output text Accumulation nbsp Strictly speaking the above equation holds also for systems with chemical reactions if the terms in the balance equation are taken to refer to total mass i e the sum of all the chemical species of the system In the absence of a chemical reaction the amount of any chemical species flowing in and out will be the same this gives rise to an equation for each species present in the system However if this is not the case then the mass balance equation must be amended to allow for the generation or depletion consumption of each chemical species Some use one term in this equation to account for chemical reactions which will be negative for depletion and positive for generation However the conventional form of this equation is written to account for both a positive generation term i e product of reaction and a negative consumption term the reactants used to produce the products Although overall one term will account for the total balance on the system if this balance equation is to be applied to an individual species and then the entire process both terms are necessary This modified equation can be used not only for reactive systems but for population balances such as arise in particle mechanics problems The equation is given below note that it simplifies to the earlier equation in the case that the generation term is zero 1 59 62 Input Generation Output Accumulation Consumption displaystyle text Input text Generation text Output text Accumulation text Consumption nbsp In the absence of a nuclear reaction the number of atoms flowing in and out must remain the same even in the presence of a chemical reaction For a balance to be formed the boundaries of the system must be clearly defined Mass balances can be taken over physical systems at multiple scales Mass balances can be simplified with the assumption of steady state in which the accumulation term is zero Illustrative example Edit nbsp Diagram showing clarifier exampleA simple example can illustrate the concept Consider the situation in which a slurry is flowing into a settling tank to remove the solids in the tank Solids are collected at the bottom by means of a conveyor belt partially submerged in the tank and water exits via an overflow outlet In this example there are two substances solids and water The water overflow outlet carries an increased concentration of water relative to solids as compared to the slurry inlet and the exit of the conveyor belt carries an increased concentration of solids relative to water Assumptions Steady state Non reactive systemAnalysisSuppose that the slurry inlet composition by mass is 50 solid and 50 water with a mass flow of 100 kg min The tank is assumed to be operating at steady state and as such accumulation is zero so input and output must be equal for both the solids and water If we know that the removal efficiency for the slurry tank is 60 then the water outlet will contain 20 kg min of solids 40 times 100 kg min times 50 solids If we measure the flow rate of the combined solids and water and the water outlet is shown to be 65 kg min then the amount of water exiting via the conveyor belt must be 5 kg min This allows us to completely determine how the mass has been distributed in the system with only limited information and using the mass balance relations across the system boundaries The mass balance for this system can be described in a tabular form Mass balance for Clarifier StreamMaterial Clarifier Inlet Clarified Water Outlet Extracted SolidsSolids 50 kg min 20 kg min 30 kg minWater 50 kg min 45 kg min 5 kg minTotal 100 kg min 65 kg min 35 kg minMass feedback recycle Edit nbsp Cooling towers are a good example of a recycle systemMass balances can be performed across systems which have cyclic flows In these systems output streams are fed back into the input of a unit often for further reprocessing 1 97 105 Such systems are common in grinding circuits where grain is crushed then sieved to only allow fine particles out of the circuit and the larger particles are returned to the roller mill grinder However recycle flows are by no means restricted to solid mechanics operations they are used in liquid and gas flows as well One such example is in cooling towers where water is pumped through a tower many times with only a small quantity of water drawn off at each pass to prevent solids build up until it has either evaporated or exited with the drawn off water The mass balance for water is M D W E The use of the recycle aids in increasing overall conversion of input products which is useful for low per pass conversion processes such as the Haber process Differential mass balances EditA mass balance can also be taken differentially The concept is the same as for a large mass balance but it is performed in the context of a limiting system for example one can consider the limiting case in time or more commonly volume A differential mass balance is used to generate differential equations that can provide an effective tool for modelling and understanding the target system The differential mass balance is usually solved in two steps first a set of governing differential equations must be obtained and then these equations must be solved either analytically or for less tractable problems numerically The following systems are good examples of the applications of the differential mass balance Ideal stirred batch reactor Ideal tank reactor also named Continuous Stirred Tank Reactor CSTR Ideal Plug Flow Reactor PFR Ideal batch reactor Edit The ideal completely mixed batch reactor is a closed system Isothermal conditions are assumed and mixing prevents concentration gradients as reactant concentrations decrease and product concentrations increase over time 2 40 41 Many chemistry textbooks implicitly assume that the studied system can be described as a batch reactor when they write about reaction kinetics and chemical equilibrium The mass balance for a substance A becomesIN PROD OUT ACC 0 r A V 0 d n A d t displaystyle begin array ccccccc text IN amp amp text PROD amp amp text OUT amp amp text ACC 0 amp amp r rm A V amp amp 0 amp amp displaystyle frac dn rm A dt end array nbsp where rA denotes the rate at which substance A is produced V is the volume which may be constant or not nA the number of moles n of substance A In a fed batch reactor some reactants ingredients are added continuously or in pulses compare making porridge by either first blending all ingredients and then letting it boil which can be described as a batch reactor or by first mixing only water and salt and making that boil before the other ingredients are added which can be described as a fed batch reactor Mass balances for fed batch reactors become a bit more complicated Reactive example Edit In the first example we will show how to use a mass balance to derive a relationship between the percent excess air for the combustion of a hydrocarbon base fuel oil and the percent oxygen in the combustion product gas First normal dry air contains 0 2095 mol of oxygen per mole of air so there is one mole of O2 in 4 773 mol of dry air For stoichiometric combustion the relationships between the mass of air and the mass of each combustible element in a fuel oil are Carbon mass of air mass of C 4 773 28 96 12 01 11 51 Hydrogen mass of air mass of H 1 4 4 773 28 96 1 008 34 28 Sulfur mass of air mass of S 4 773 28 96 32 06 4 31 displaystyle begin array rccc text Carbon amp frac text mass of air text mass of C amp amp frac 4 773 times 28 96 12 01 amp amp 11 51 2pt text Hydrogen amp frac text mass of air text mass of H amp amp frac frac 1 4 4 773 times 28 96 1 008 amp amp 34 28 6pt text Sulfur amp frac text mass of air text mass of S amp amp frac 4 773 times 28 96 32 06 amp amp 4 31 end array nbsp Considering the accuracy of typical analytical procedures an equation for the mass of air per mass of fuel at stoichiometric combustion is mass of air mass of fuel A F R mass 11 5 w C 34 3 w H w S w O displaystyle frac text mass of air text mass of fuel mathrm AFR text mass 11 5 w rm C 34 3 w rm H w rm S w rm O nbsp where wC wH wS wO refer to the mass fraction of each element in the fuel oil sulfur burning to SO2 and AFRmass refers to the air fuel ratio in mass units For 1 kg of fuel oil containing 86 1 C 13 6 H 0 2 O and 0 1 S the stoichiometric mass of air is 14 56 kg so AFR 14 56 The combustion product mass is then 15 56 kg At exact stoichiometry O2 should be absent At 15 percent excess air the AFR 16 75 and the mass of the combustion product gas is 17 75 kg which contains 0 505 kg of excess oxygen The combustion gas thus contains 2 84 percent O2 by mass The relationships between percent excess air and O2 in the combustion gas are accurately expressed by quadratic equations valid over the range 0 30 percent excess air excess air 1 2804 O 2 in combustion gas 2 4 49 O 2 in combustion gas O 2 in combustion gas 0 00138 excess air 2 0 210 excess air displaystyle begin aligned amp text excess air 1 2804 times ce O2 text in combustion gas 2 4 49 times ce O2 text in combustion gas 4pt amp ce O2 text in combustion gas 0 00138 times text excess air 2 0 210 times text excess air end aligned nbsp In the second example we will use the law of mass action to derive the expression for a chemical equilibrium constant Assume we have a closed reactor in which the following liquid phase reversible reaction occurs a A b B c C d D displaystyle a mathrm A b mathrm B leftrightarrow c mathrm C d mathrm D nbsp The mass balance for substance A becomesIN PROD OUT ACC 0 r A V 0 d n A d t displaystyle begin array ccccccc text IN amp amp text PROD amp amp text OUT amp amp text ACC 0 amp amp r rm A V amp amp 0 amp amp displaystyle frac dn mathrm A dt end array nbsp As we have a liquid phase reaction we can usually assume a constant volume and since n A V C A displaystyle n rm A V C rm A nbsp we getr A V V d C A d t displaystyle r rm A V V frac dC rm A dt nbsp orr A d C A d t displaystyle r rm A frac dC rm A dt nbsp In many textbooks this is given as the definition of reaction rate without specifying the implicit assumption that we are talking about reaction rate in a closed system with only one reaction This is an unfortunate mistake that has confused many students over the years According to the law of mass action the forward reaction rate can be written asr 1 k 1 A a B b displaystyle r 1 k 1 mathrm A a mathrm B b nbsp and the backward reaction rate asr 1 k 1 C c D d displaystyle r 1 k 1 mathrm C c mathrm D d nbsp The rate at which substance A is produced is thusr A a r 1 r 1 displaystyle r mathrm A a r 1 r 1 nbsp and since at equilibrium the concentration of A is constant we getr A a r 1 r 1 d C A d t 0 displaystyle r mathrm A a r 1 r 1 frac dC mathrm A dt 0 nbsp or rearrangedk 1 k 1 C c D d A a B b K e q displaystyle frac k 1 k 1 frac mathrm C c mathrm D d mathrm A a mathrm B b K eq nbsp Ideal tank reactor continuously stirred tank reactor Edit Main article Continuous stirred tank reactor The continuously mixed tank reactor is an open system with an influent stream of reactants and an effluent stream of products 2 41 A lake can be regarded as a tank reactor and lakes with long turnover times e g with low flux to volume ratios can for many purposes be regarded as continuously stirred e g homogeneous in all respects The mass balance then becomesIN PROD OUT ACC Q 0 C A 0 r A V Q C A d n A d t displaystyle begin array ccccccc text IN amp amp text PROD amp amp text OUT amp amp text ACC Q 0 cdot C rm A 0 amp amp r rm A cdot V amp amp Q cdot C rm A amp amp displaystyle frac dn rm A dt end array nbsp where Q0 is the volumetric flow into the system Q is the volumetric flow out of the system CA 0 is the concentration of A in the inflow CA is the concentration of A in the outflow In an open system we can never reach a chemical equilibrium We can however reach a steady state where all state variables temperature concentrations etc remain constant ACC 0 Example Edit Consider a bathtub in which there is some bathing salt dissolved We now fill in more water keeping the bottom plug in What happens Since there is no reaction PROD 0 and since there is no outflow Q 0 The mass balance becomesIN PROD OUT ACC Q 0 C A 0 0 0 C A d n A d t displaystyle begin array ccccccc text IN amp amp text PROD amp amp text OUT amp amp text ACC Q 0 cdot C rm A 0 amp amp 0 amp amp 0 cdot C rm A amp amp displaystyle frac dn rm A dt end array nbsp orQ 0 C A 0 d C A V d t V d C A d t C A d V d t displaystyle Q 0 cdot C rm A 0 frac dC rm A V dt V frac dC rm A dt C rm A frac dV dt nbsp Using a mass balance for total volume however it is evident that d V d t Q 0 displaystyle tfrac dV dt Q 0 nbsp and that V V t 0 Q 0 t displaystyle V V t 0 Q 0 t nbsp Thus we getd C A d t Q 0 V t 0 Q 0 t C A 0 C A displaystyle frac dC rm A dt frac Q 0 V t 0 Q 0 t left C rm A 0 C rm A right nbsp Note that there is no reaction and hence no reaction rate or rate law involved and yet d C A d t 0 displaystyle tfrac dC rm A dt neq 0 nbsp We can thus draw the conclusion that reaction rate can not be defined in a general manner using d C d t displaystyle tfrac dC dt nbsp One must first write down a mass balance before a link between d C d t displaystyle tfrac dC dt nbsp and the reaction rate can be found Many textbooks however define reaction rate asr d C A d t displaystyle r frac dC mathrm A dt nbsp without mentioning that this definition implicitly assumes that the system is closed has a constant volume and that there is only one reaction Ideal plug flow reactor PFR Edit The idealized plug flow reactor is an open system resembling a tube with no mixing in the direction of flow but perfect mixing perpendicular to the direction of flow often used for systems like rivers and water pipes if the flow is turbulent When a mass balance is made for a tube one first considers an infinitesimal part of the tube and make a mass balance over that using the ideal tank reactor model 2 46 47 That mass balance is then integrated over the entire reactor volume to obtain d Q C A d V r A displaystyle frac d Q cdot C rm A dV r rm A nbsp In numeric solutions e g when using computers the ideal tube is often translated to a series of tank reactors as it can be shown that a PFR is equivalent to an infinite number of stirred tanks in series but the latter is often easier to analyze especially at steady state More complex problems EditIn reality reactors are often non ideal in which combinations of the reactor models above are used to describe the system Not only chemical reaction rates but also mass transfer rates may be important in the mathematical description of a system especially in heterogeneous systems 3 As the chemical reaction rate depends on temperature it is often necessary to make both an energy balance often a heat balance rather than a full fledged energy balance as well as mass balances to fully describe the system A different reactor model might be needed for the energy balance A system that is closed with respect to mass might be open with respect to energy e g since heat may enter the system through conduction Commercial use EditIn industrial process plants using the fact that the mass entering and leaving any portion of a process plant must balance data validation and reconciliation algorithms may be employed to correct measured flows provided that enough redundancy of flow measurements exist to permit statistical reconciliation and exclusion of detectably erroneous measurements Since all real world measured values contain inherent error the reconciled measurements provide a better basis than the measured values do for financial reporting optimization and regulatory reporting Software packages exist to make this commercially feasible on a daily basis See also EditBioreactor Chemical engineering Continuity equation Dilution equation Energy accounting Glacier mass balance Mass flux Material flow analysis Material balance planning Fluid mechanicsReferences Edit a b c d Himmelblau David M 1967 Basic Principles and Calculations in Chemical Engineering 2nd ed Prentice Hall a b c Weber Walter J Jr 1972 Physicochemical Processes for Water Quality Control Wiley Interscience ISBN 0 471 92435 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Perry Robert H Chilton Cecil H Kirkpatrick Sidney D 1963 Chemical Engineers Handbook fourth ed McGraw Hill pp 4 21 External links EditMaterial Balance Calculations Material Balance Fundamentals The Material Balance for Chemical Reactors Material and energy balance Heat and material balance method of process control for petrochemical plants and oil refineries United States Patent 6751527 Morris Arthur E Geiger Gordon Fine H Alan 2011 Handbook on Material and Energy Balance Calculations in Material Processing 3rd ed Wiley ISBN 978 1 118 06565 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mass balance amp oldid 1175392730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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