Category: Material Balance Computations
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Material Balances over Multiple Process Units
The incompleteness of the desired reaction and the occurrence of undesired side reaction introduced additional levels of complexity in the simple combustion process previously described. By now, readers should have developed a sense of the enormity of computational tasks for a chemical process plant, considering that a chemical process typically has a large number of…
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Material Balances in Reacting Systems
Reacting systems are characterized by the disappearance of reactants and appearance of the products. Clearly, molecular species are not conserved in the reaction, and at steady state, the rate of input of a compound participating in the reaction is not equal to the rate of its output. However, as long as no nuclear reactions are occurring…
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Material Balances in Nonreacting Systems
Material balances in nonreacting systems are illustrated through a simple example involving dilution of a concentrated solution, an operation frequently encountered in a chemical process plant. Example 6.2.1 Dilution of a Concentrated Aqueous Solution The production process for sodium hydroxide (NaOH) yields a 28% (by mass) solution of sodium hydroxide in a membrane cell. A…
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Quantitative Principles of Material Balance
A chemical process typically consists of several units that may involve chemical reactions and/or simple physical separation and mixing operations, as described in previous chapters. The process streams may be constituted of a single phase (gas/liquid/solid) or may be multiphase in nature. A unit may or may not be operating at steady state. Regardless of the…