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chemical reactor |
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chemical reactor [′kem·i·kəl rē′ak·tər] (chemical engineering) Vessel, tube, pipe, or other container within which a chemical reaction is made to take place; may be batch or continuous, open or packed, and can use thermal, catalytic, or irradiation actuation. Chemical reactor A vessel in which chemical reactions take place. A combination of vessels is known as a chemical reactor network. Chemical reactors have diverse sizes, shapes, and modes and conditions of operation based on the nature of the reaction system and its behavior as a function of temperature, pressure, catalyst properties, and other factors. Laboratory chemical reactors are used to obtain reaction characteristics. Therefore, the shape and mode of operation of a reactor on this scale differ markedly from that of the large-scale industrial reactor, which is designed for efficient production rather than for gathering information. Laboratory reactors are best designed to achieve well-defined conditions of concentrations and temperature so that a reaction model can be developed which will prove useful in the design of a large-scale reactor model. Chemical reactions may occur in the presence of a single phase (liquid or gas), in which case they are called homogeneous, or they may occur in the presence of more than one phase and are referred to as heterogeneous. In addition, chemical reactions may be catalyzed. Examples of homogeneous reactions are gaseous fuel combustion (gas phase) and acid-base neutralization (liquid phase). Examples of heterogeneous systems are carbon dioxide absorption into alkali (gas-liquid); coal combustion and automobile exhaust purification (gas-solid); water softening (liquid-solid); coal liquefaction and oil hydrogenation (gas-liquid-solid); and cake reduction of iron ore (solid-solid). Chemical reactors may be operated in batch, semibatch, or continuous modes. When a reactor is operated in a batch mode, the reactants are charged, and the vessel is closed and brought to the desired temperature and pressure. These conditions are maintained for the time needed to achieve the desired conversion and selectivity, that is, the required quantity and quality of product. At the end of the reaction cycle, the entire mass is discharged and another cycle is begun. Batch operation is labor-intensive and therefore is commonly used only in industries involved in limited production of fine chemicals, such as pharmaceuticals. In a semibatch reactor operation, one or more reactants are in the batch mode, while the coreactant is fed and withdrawn continuously. In a chemical reactor designed for continuous operation, there is continuous addition to, and withdrawal of reactants and products from, the reactor system. There are a number of different types of reactors designed for gas-solid heterogeneous reactions. These include fixed beds, tubular catalytic wall reactors, and fluid beds. Many different types of gas-liquid-solid reactors have been developed for specific reaction conditions. The three-phase trickle-bed reactor employs a fixed bed of solid catalyst over which a liquid phase trickles downward in the presence of a cocurrent gas phase. An alternative is the slurry reactor, a vessel within which coreactant gas is dispersed into a liquid phase bearing suspended catalyst or coreactant solid particles. At high ratios of reactor to diameter, the gas-liquid-solid reactor is often termed an ebulating-bed (high solids concentration) or bubble column reactor (low solids concentration). Gas-liquid reactors assume a form virtually identical to the absorbers utilized in physical absorption processes. Solid-solid reactions are often conducted in rotary kilns which provide the necessary intimacy of contact between the solid coreactants. See Gas absorption operations, Kiln How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| Gemini was conceived for high power, demanding applications, such as internal mixers, chemical reactors and conveyors. This low-temperature and low-pressure neutralization process is different from the baseline technology of incineration previously selected by the Army in that it uses chemical reactors instead of incinerators. Chemical reactors the size of a pen that are capable of cleaning up toxic waste by converting it into inert - harmless - components. |
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