Study of reaction–diffusion problem: modeling, exact analytical solution, and experimental verification

Abstract Nonlinear diffusion–reaction problem was investigated experimentally for the reference reaction (hydrogenation of propylene under isothermal conditions; a slab of catalyst pellet i.e., disks of large diameter/width ratio were applied). The diffusion–reaction model in the catalyst pellet wit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mirosław K. Szukiewicz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2020-06-01
Series:SN Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s42452-020-3045-0
Description
Summary:Abstract Nonlinear diffusion–reaction problem was investigated experimentally for the reference reaction (hydrogenation of propylene under isothermal conditions; a slab of catalyst pellet i.e., disks of large diameter/width ratio were applied). The diffusion–reaction model in the catalyst pellet with external mass-transfer resistances was solved analytically. Dependently on parameters values, two separate solutions were found: dead zone inside the pellet does not exist or it appears. In the first case, a common model is acceptable (regular model i.e., boundary value problem), in the second one, a model includes additional condition (dead zone model i.e., free boundary problem). Analysis of the solution presented indicated that either regular or “dead zone” model correctly describes the process for specific parameter values (with the only exception—multiple steady-state region—where the correct interpretation requires the combined application of the both). This result shows that the full description of the real process includes solutions of two different BVPs. Experimental research confirmed results anticipated by theory. It allowed to draw conclusions that go beyond this particular example i.e., the regular model, commonly applied in heterogeneous catalysis, does not adequately recognize dead zone problem. If “dead zone” appears, free boundary problem has to be consider, otherwise, process simulations will be incorrect. The conclusions drawn are valid also for biofilms.
ISSN:2523-3963
2523-3971