Modeling Chemical Reactions in Modelica By Use of Chemo-bonds
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Transcript of Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009 Modeling Chemical Reactions in Modelica By Use of Chemo-bonds...
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Modeling Chemical Reactions in ModelicaBy Use of Chemo-bonds
Prof. Dr. François E. CellierDepartment of Computer Science
ETH ZurichSwitzerland
Dr. Jürgen GreifenederCorporate Research Center
ABBGermany
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Chemical Reactions and Convective Flows
• Most researchers model chemical reactions using (molar) mass flow equations only, not taking into account energy flows at all.
• This is possible for isothermal and isobaric reactions, but in general doesn’t work, because the reaction rate constants depend on temperature and in the case of gaseous reactions also on pressure.
• A better approach to modeling chemical reaction systems is by means of bond graphs. This shall be demonstrated here.
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction I
• Given the following balance reaction:
• Its individual step reactions are known and well understood:
H2 + Br2 2HBr⇌
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction II• The mass flow equations can be written as follows:
• where:
Br2 = –k1
+ k2 – k5
Br· = 2k1 – 2k2
– k3 + k4
+ k5
H2 = –k3
+ k4
H· = k3 – k4
– k5
HBr = k3 – k4
+ k5
k1 = k1 · nBr2
k2 = k2 · (nBr·)2 /V k3
= k3 · nH2 · nBr· /V
k4 = k4 · nHBr · nH· /V k5
= k5 · nH· · nBr2 /V
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Chemical Energy Flow• Each mass flow is accompanied by a chemical energy
flow:
• such that:
molar flow rate
chemical potential
J/mol]
mol/sec]
g [J/kg]
m [kg/sec].TF
mass flow rate
Gibbs potential
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction III• The step reactions can be interpreted as a bond graph:
Br2 = –k1
+ k2 – k5
reaction rate equations
k1 = 2Br
– Br2
energy flow equations
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction IV• Programmed in BondLib:
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction V• Simulation results:
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009December 4, 2008
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction VI• The reaction rate equations can be rewritten in a matrix-
vector form:
• or:
Br2 –1
+1
0 0 1 k1
Br· +2 –2 –1
+1
+1 k2
H2 = 0 0 –1
+1
0 · k3
H· 0 0 +1
–1
–1 k4
HBr 0 0 +1
–1
+1 k5
mix = N · reac
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009December 4, 2008
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction VII• The energy flow equations can also be written down in a
matrix-vector form:
• or:
k1 –1
+2
0 0 0 Br2
k2 +1
–2 0
0
0 Br·
k3 = 0 –1
–1
+1
+1 · H2
k4 0 +1 +1
–1
–1 H·
k5 1 +1 0
–1
+1 HBr
reac = NT · mix
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009December 4, 2008
• Thus, the bond graph describing the chemical reaction network can be reinterpreted as a multiport transformer:
• where:
The Chemical Reaction Network I
mix = N · reac
reac = NT · mix
mix
mixMTF
N
reac
reac
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009December 4, 2008
The Chemical Reaction Bond Graph
• We can now plug everything together:
mix
mixMTF
N
reac
reacCF RF
Capacitive storage of all reactants in the mixture.
Transformation of the reactants into each other in the chemical reaction.
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction VIII• Programmed in MultiBondLib:
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction IX
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Chemical Reactions and Convective Flows
• The chemical reaction bond graph, as shown until now, still doesn’t reflect the physics of chemical reactions in all their complexity.
• The problem is that a substance that undergoes a transformation does not only carry its mass along, but also its volume and its heat.
• Hence we should describe each step reactions by three parallel bonds, one describing mass flow, a second describing volumetric flow, and a third describing heat flow.
• Thus, we should really use thermo-bonds.
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Thermo-bonds
• A (red) thermo-bond represents a parallel connection of three (black) regular bonds.
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Thermo-bonds and Chemo-bonds• The (green) chemo-bonds and the (red) thermo-bonds are
essentially the same thing. However, the thermo-bonds have been designed for convective flows, and therefore, operate on regular mass flows (measured in kg/sec), whereas the chemo-bonds were designed for chemical reactions, and therefore, operate on molar mass flows (measured in mol/sec).
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction X• This version of the chemical
reaction network contains more information than the original one. Yet it is simpler, because the thermal and pneumatic ports don’t need to be carried separately any longer. They are now integrated into the chemical reaction network. Each mass flow carries its own volumetric and heat flows along.
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009December 4, 2008
• Also the thermo-bond graph describing the chemical reaction network together with its volumetric and heat flows can be reinterpreted as a multiport transformer:
• This transformer is now of cardinality 15, as there are 5 step reactions, each represented by a thermo-bond of cardinality 3.
The Chemical Reaction Network II
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009December 4, 2008
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction XI
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009December 4, 2008
Hydrogen-Bromine Reaction XII
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Efficiency Considerations
• The simulations are so fast that there is very little difference between all four of these models.
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Conclusions I• Chemical reactions are quite tricky. To model chemical
reactions down to their physical and, in particular, thermodynamic properties quickly leads to models that are rather bulky.
• The bond graph methodology offers us a unified framework to deal with this complexity in an orderly and organized fashion.
• To this end, we used all three of our bond graph libraries; BondLib, featuring (black) regular bonds, MultiBondLib, featuring (blue) vector bonds, and ThermoBondLib, featuring (red) special vector bonds for the description of convective flows.
Start PresentationSeptember 21, 2009
Conclusions II• To deal with chemical reactions more conveniently, we
introduced even a fourth bond graph library: ChemBondLib, featuring (green) special vector bonds for the description of chemical reaction flow rates.
• The chemo-bonds are identical to the thermo-bonds, except that they describe their internal mass flows with molar flow rates and chemical potentials, rather than with regular mass flow rates and Gibbs potentials (the specific Gibbs energy).