Gas pressure calculation of reactive species in a fixed bed reactor

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The discussion centers on modeling gas pressure in a tubular fixed bed plug reactor undergoing an exothermic gas-solid reaction. Key factors influencing pressure include viscous drag, gas-solid reactions, and temperature changes. The individual, a university student, is not a chemical engineer and has struggled to find models that account for reacting species and temperature variations, primarily encountering Darcy's Law and the Ergun equation for non-reacting fluids. They have calculated a Reynolds number of approximately 1-2 and are seeking a model that incorporates gas production/removal and temperature effects. The conversation suggests that simulations may be more suitable than analytical models due to the complexity of reaction rates, heat transfer, and local porosity. Recommendations for resources include "Transport Phenomena in Materials Processing" by Poirier and Geiger, and texts on reaction engineering such as Levenspiel or Scott Fogler's work.
Hologram0110
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Hi everyone,
I'm a university student doing some RA work which involves modelling the gas pressure in a tubular fixed bed plug reactor with an exothermic gas-solid reaction. I know the pressure will be influenced by three things: viscous drag, gas reacting with the solid and temperature increasing.

I'm not a chemical engineer, so I'm not really familiar with these types of calculations. I've done my best to Google, but I can only seem to find models for non-reacting species and no temperature change. I've found two main models: Darcy's Law (low Reynolds number, incompressible fluids) and Ergun equation.

My rough calculations put the Reynolds number approximately 1~2. Does anyone know where I can find a model which includes production/removal of gas as well as temperature changes?
 
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There are many more variables here than you may realize. The reaction rate can be very complex, the rate of heat transfer would need to be estimated, the local porosity in the bed would need to be modeled to assess the local gas conditions, etc.

This sounds like it's better suited for simulations than analytical modeling.

But, I've found that Poirier and Geiger's Transport Phenomena in Materials Processing is a very accessible introduction to these kinds of problems.
 
Sorry if I didn't make it clear, I'm doing finite-element modeling using COMSOL multiphysics. So I'm not really looking for an analytical solution so much as a set of algebraic and differential equations to solve numerically.

I've already got a reaction rate model which is a function of temperature, steam partial pressure, particle size and reactant depletion. I've also already got a basic transient heat-transfer model which includes conduction and convection assuming the gas and solids are in thermal equilibrium.

I've also already implemented the Ergun model for pressure drop through a packed bed. However it doesn't consider the effects of removing gas from the flow and increasing the temperature which is why I'm looking for a better model. I have a physics background and this just seems like something that should have a standard modeling approach but I haven't found it yet.
 
Hologram0110 said:
Hi everyone,
I'm a university student doing some RA work which involves modelling the gas pressure in a tubular fixed bed plug reactor with an exothermic gas-solid reaction. I know the pressure will be influenced by three things: viscous drag, gas reacting with the solid and temperature increasing.

I'm not a chemical engineer, so I'm not really familiar with these types of calculations. I've done my best to Google, but I can only seem to find models for non-reacting species and no temperature change. I've found two main models: Darcy's Law (low Reynolds number, incompressible fluids) and Ergun equation.

My rough calculations put the Reynolds number approximately 1~2. Does anyone know where I can find a model which includes production/removal of gas as well as temperature changes?
See a text on reaction engineering such as Levenspiel or Scott Fogler's book.
 
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