Lecture 9
Lecture 9
Lecture 9
of Material Balances
Objectives:
1. Draw a flow diagram or sketch for problems involving recycle, bypass, and
purge.
2. Apply the 10-step strategy to solve steady-state problems involving recycle,
bypass, and/or purge streams.
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Recycle
Recycle is an example of a multi-unit system. Most often used in reactive systems to
feed un-reacted reactants back into a reactor thereby achieving a higher conversion of
expensive reactants
Suppose we have the following chemical reaction taking place in a reactor,
AB
Since it is rare for any chemical reaction to proceed to completion,
some of A will remain in the product stream.
Feed
A
Reactor
Product
A, B
This is not an ideal situation as some unreacted A leaves in the product stream
(wasteful) and the final product is not very pure in B.
How can we improve this situation?
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Recycle
A B
200 kg A/min
110 kg A/min 30 kg B/min
Fresh Feed
10 kg A/min
100 kg B/min
Reactor
100 kg A/min
130 kg B/min
Separator
Recycle stream
90 kg A/min
30 kg B/min
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Recycle
Recycle is a common feature of chemical processes.
There are several reasons for using recycle a chemical process:
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Bypass
Bypass is also an example of a multi-unit system and used in both reactive and nonreactive systems. A fraction of the feed to a process unit is diverted around the unit
and combined with the output stream, thus varying the composition and properties
of the product.
Feed
Process units
Product
Bypass
Chemical processes involving bypass streams are treated in exactly the same
manner as processes containing recycle streams: the flowsheet is drawn and
labeled, balances around the process unit or the stream mixing point following the
process unit are used to determine the unknown process variables.
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Purge
A problem that can occur in processes that involve recycle is that a material that enters the
process in the feed stream or is generated in the reactor may remain entirely in the recycle
stream rather than being carried out in the product stream.
To prevent this buildup, a portion of the recycle stream is withdrawn as a purge stream. This
is effective in eliminating the build-up of undesirable components, but also results in the
loss of some reactants.
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G (kg)
mass fr.
A 0.4
B 0.6
Process
Separator
P (kg)
mass fr.
A 0.05
B 0.95
R (kg)
Recycle A only: mass fr.
A 1.00
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yB/(1-yB)
xB/(1-xB)
= 2.25
where yB and xB are the mole fractions of benzene in the vapour and liquid streams, respectively.
a) Take a basis of 100 mol fed to the column. Draw and completely label a flowchart, and for each of
the four systems (overall process, column, condenser and reboiler), do the degree-of-freedom
analysis.
b) Write in order the equations and Calculate the molar amounts of the overhead and bottoms
products, the mole fraction of benzene in the bottoms product, and the percentage recovery of toluene
in the bottoms product (100 x moles toluene in bottoms/mole toluene in feed).
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100
reactant input to process
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The recycle stream allows operation of the reactor at low single-pass conversion, and
have high overall conversion for the system.
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BaSO4 + 2HClO4
MW:
Ba(ClO4)2:336
BaSO4: 233
H2SO4: 98
HClO4: 100.5
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