Chemical Engineering Science, Vol.59, No.4, 901-918, 2004
Equilibrium theory and nonlinear waves for reactive distillation columns and chromatographic reactors
A general framework for analyzing and understanding the dynamics of reactive separation processes is developed. The theory is based on the assumption of simultaneous phase and reaction equilibrium. It makes use of transformed concentration variables, which were first introduced by Doherty and co-workers for the steady state design of reactive distillation processes (Proc. Roy. Soc. London A 413 (1987a) 459). It is shown that these transformed variables can be directly generalized to the dynamic problem considered here. Further, they can also be applied to other reactive separation processes like fixed bed as well as countercurrent chromatographic reactors, for example. They provide profound insight into the dynamic behavior of these processes and reveal bounds of feasible operation caused by reactive azeotropy. It is shown that reactive azeotropy, which is a well-known phenomenon in reactive distillation (Proc. Roy. Soc. London A 413 (1987b) 443) may also rise under very similar conditions in other reactive separation processes like chromatographic reactors for example. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:reactive separation processes;reactive distillation;chromatographic reactors;equilibrium theory;nonlinear waves;reactive azeotropy