A Transfer Function

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ωs,B,1 of B depends only on τ -1 (Tab. 1) k. B. / s-1. Reactant A. Product B ω s,A,1. / rad s- ... Modeling an unsteady-state isothermal CSTR with typical first-order.
D. Meyer, J. Friedland, T. Kohn and R. Güttel Institute of Chemical Engineering, Ulm University, D-89081 Ulm, Germany Modeling an unsteady-state isothermal CSTR with typical first-order reaction networks:

Investigation of unsteady-state chemical processes with transfer functions (TF)  utilization of TF commonly used in electrical engineering  deduce kinetic parameters with reduced mathematical effort

Evaluation of poles and zeros of TF

Objective: Investigation of the influence of kinetic constants on the frequency response.

 analysis of cut-off frequency s,I  investigation of residence time  and kinetic constants ki

Reaction Unsteady-state isothermal CSTR model Analysis with two methods

Time Domain: Laplace Domain:

Method 1: Time domain analysis

Transfer Function

Figure 2: Reactant A (left) and product P (right) with different reaction rate ratios for a consecutive reaction for a two-step reaction system.

Each reaction step adds an additional pole to the TF of P  additional -20 dB/decade magnitude  -90° phase shift for each step  increased frequency damping after s,P,1 Initial condition:

Poles Reactant A

Product P

A’s frequency response is unaffected by the number of reaction steps  identical to a reaction methods match

Reaction

Method 2: Laplace domain analysis

Transfer Function

Figure 3: Reactant A (left) and product B (right) with different reaction rate ratios for a parallel reaction.

Poles Reactant A

Reaction

 typical first-order - (left) and second-order (right) low-pass behavior  s,A is a summation of  -1 and the kinetic constants  boundary case ( ):

Product B / C

s,B,1 s,B,2 s,B,2 s,B,2

s,A,1 s,A,1 s,A,1 s,A,1

Transfer Function

Reaction

Figure 1: Reactant A (left) and product B (right) with different reaction rate constants for a irreversible reaction. Left: Three typical regions for a frequency response are indicated for kB = 0 s-1 .

Transfer Function

Three distinct regions for frequency response:

Poles Reactant A

1. quasi-steady-state region (qss):

Product B

 phase and magnitude unaffected by input frequency[1]  steady-state kinetics can be applied 2. full transient region (ft):  first-order/ second-order low-pass behavior for A / B  s,A,1 of A increases with kB (Tab. 1)  s,B,1 of B depends only on  -1 (Tab. 1)

Figure 4: Reactant A (left) and product B (right) with different reaction rate ratios for a reversible reaction.

 qss region: magnitude of A is constant, but decreases with decreasing backward reaction rate  ft region:  small kB: boundary case:  large kB : complex behavior for increasing frequencies reactant A

product B

 phase shift increases towards 0°  magnitude stays constant

 constant phase shift of – 90°

Table 1: Influence of ki on s kB /

s-1

Reactant A

Product B

s,A,1 / rad s-1

s,B,1 / rad s-1

s,B,2 / rad s-1

0

0.2

-

-

1

1.2

0.2

1.2

10

10.2

0.2

10.2

100

100.2

0.2

100.2

kB derived by analysis of s,A,1

in all investigated cases: three regions exist:  qss  ft  rss

 resonance-like state

Product B

Zeros Reactant A

system acts as an internal feedback loop with strong similarities to a chemical buffer

s,B,1 depends only on  -1

 derived by analysis of s,B,1 3. relaxed steady-state (rss):  constant phase shift and constant decrease of the magnitude[1]:  reactant A: - 90 ° / -20 dB/decade  product B: -180° / -40 dB/decade Literature: [1] Periodic operation of reactors, 1st ed. (Eds: P.L. Silveston, R.R. Hudgins), Elsevier, Amsterdam, Boston, Kidlington, 2013.

 simulation data in time domain matches simulation data in frequency domain  typical regions for the frequency response (qss, ft and rss) are defined for first-order reactions  kinetic data for linear systems can be derived by evaluation of the frequency response  use of Bode Plot for analysis of frequency response for non-linear systems possible Perspective: Implementation chemical processes in electrical grid for integration of renewable resources into chemical value chains

further details see: D. Meyer, J. Friedland, T. Kohn, R. Güttel, Transfer Functions for Periodic Reactor Operation: Fundamental Methodology for Simple Reaction Networks, submitted.

Poles Reactant A

Contact:

[email protected]

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