Elements of
Chemical Reaction Engineering
6th Edition



Home



Essentials of
Chemical Reaction Engineering
Second Edition

  Select  Chapter  >>     TOC     Preface     1     2     3     4     5     6     7     8     9     10     11     12     13     14     15     16     17     18     Appendices  
›

By Chapter Hide

  • Objectives
  • Living Example Problems
  • Extra Help
  • - Summary Notes
  • - LearnChemE Screencasts
  • - FAQs
  • - Interactive Computer Modules
  • Additional Material
  • Self Test
  • i>Clicker Questions
  • Professional Reference Shelf

By Concept Hide

  • Interactive Modules
  • -Web Modules
  • -Interactive Computer Games
  • Living Example Problems

U of M Hide

  • Asynchronous Learning
  • ChE 344
  • ChE 528

Chapter 5: Isothermal Reactor Design: Conversion

Self test

Calculating V for a Zero-Order Reaction
Pressure Drop in a Packed Bed Reactor
Pressure and Reaction Orders
What Four Things are Wrong with this Solution?"
Effect of Reducing Particle Size on Conversion in a PBR

Additional Homework Problems

Bioreactors and Reactions
  1. CDP5-BC (Ecological Engineering) A much more complicated version of problem 4-17 uses actual pond (CSTR) sizes and flow rates in modeling the site with CSTRs for the Des Plaines river experimental wetlands site (EW3) in order to degrade atrazine.
  2. CDP5-CB The rate of binding ligands to receptors is studied in this application of reaction kinetics to bioengineering. The time to bind 50% of the ligands to the receptros is required. (J. Linderman, University of Michigan)
  3. CDP5-A The decomposition of cumene is to be carried out at a high temperature in a packed-bed reactor. At this temperature the reaction is internal diffusion limited and first order in cumene.
  4. CDP5-B Ethyl acetate is an extensively used solvent and can be formed by the vapor-phase esterification of acetic acid and ethanol. The reaction was studied using a microporous resin as a catalyst in a packed bed reactor. The reaction is first order in ethanol and pseudo-first-order in acetic acid.
  5. CDP5-C Alkylated cyclohexanols are important intermediates in the fragrance and perfume industry. Recent work has focused on gas-phase catalyzed hydrogenation of o-cresol to 2-methylcyclohexanone, which is then hydrogenated to 2-methylcyclohexanol