Hi everybody, I have a very basic question, but I can´t understand the answer. I will be very gratefull if anyone helpme.
I must calculate the residence time in a fixed bed reactor (Time=Volume/Flow rate) and I don´t know which Volume I must use. Must I use the "total Volume" of the reactor or just the volume Available for liquid in the bed "Total Volume x Porosity"
Complete description of the problemIntroduction (you could skip it) :I´m trying to know the residence time distribution in a fixed reactor (because isn´t an ideal plug flow). I made some experiments by a tracer inyection in the reactor feed and then I have measured the tracer concetration in the output. The theory associated is described in "Chemical Reaction Engineering" writen by O.Levenspiel (Non ideal flow chapter).
I get very nice results and I constructed the Residence Time Distribution curve (E(t)). I calculate the experimental average time with numerical methods using RTD curve. My problem is when I try to calculate the theoretical Residence Time in order to compare it with the experimental data.
Question :All of us knows the ecuation : Residence Time = Volume / Flow rate. My question is about how to calculate the volume for this ecuation in the case of fixed bed reactor.
I thought that the volume is the volume available for the liquid flow in the reactor (Total Volume x Porosity), but some collegue told me "that´s wrong" the volume is just the TOTAL Volume of the bed. The experimental data fix well if I use the total volume. I don´t understand clearly why because I guest each particle will stay in the reactor : Volume for liquid particles flow / liquid flow rate.
Numerical Example :Porosity (P) = holes volume / total volume of the bed
Total Volume = 1 L
Porosity = 0,4
Liquid Available Volume = 1 x 0,4 = 0,4 L
Residence Time = Volume
(total or liquid available? ) / Flow rate
Thank you very much.
Tripton