Kinetic Modelling Associated with Coal Carbonisation

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Quinlan M. J Ratcliffe J. S
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
10
File Size:
617 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1975

Abstract

Chemical kinetics is a dependent process which usually correlates the rate at which a reaction proceeds with the mechanism descriptive of the manner by which reactive particles interact. Given the latter, the object gen- erally is to find the reaction rate dependency in terms of an intensive property of the system - number of reactive particles present, and of the energetics of the system - usually temperature. Chemical kinetics depend on a dem- onstration that reaction considerations alone control the phenomenological process under study. For these rea- sons, chemical kinetics are usually involved in homogeneous gaseous systems. Even in liquid homogeneous sys- tems earliness or lateness of reactant mixing rather than chemical kinetics may be controlling. Considerations of transport phenomena are involved in heterogeneous systems and often control the observable rate:an additional problem in such systems is to apportion the rate due to mass transfer - usually a linear process - and that due to reaction which may be linear or non-linear. Experimentally, conditions are often chosen so that only one consideration controls but this becomes more difficult where solid phases are involved. Kinetic modelling involves considerations of chemical kinetics, transport phenomena, and factors attributable to the physical environment in which the process takes place. The latter two considerations may be quite different as between experiment and plant. The kinetic model may be a mathematical representation of a conceptual mech- anistic model of the reaction. Alternatively, it may be an empirical relationship resulting from, for example, some curve fitting procedure applied to experimental data. The latter approach may be necessary where the system is particularly complicated.
Citation

APA: Quinlan M. J Ratcliffe J. S  (1975)  Kinetic Modelling Associated with Coal Carbonisation

MLA: Quinlan M. J Ratcliffe J. S Kinetic Modelling Associated with Coal Carbonisation. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1975.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account