Material and Energy Balance
Material and Energy Balance
Material and Energy Balance
PROCESS CLASSIFICATION
Chemical processes may be classified as batch, continuous, or semibatch and as either steady
state or transient. Before writing material balances for a process system, you must know into
which of these categories the process falls.
1. Batch process. The feed is charged (fed) into a vessel at the beginning of the process and
the vessel contents are removed sometime later. No mass crosses the system boundaries
between the time the feed is charged and the time the product is removed. Example:
Rapidly add reactants to a tank and remove the products and unconsumed reactants
sometime later when the system has come to equilibrium.
2. Continuous process. The inputs and outputs flow continuously throughout the duration
of the process. Example: Pump a mixture of liquids into a distillation column at a
constant rate and steadily withdraw product streams from the top and bottom of the
column.
3. Semibatch process. Any process that is neither batch nor continuous. Examples: Allow
the contents of a pressurized gas container to escape to the atmosphere; slowly blend
several liquids in a tank from which nothing is being withdrawn. If the values of all the
variables in a process (i.e., all temperatures, pressures, volumes, flow rates) do not
change with time, except possibly for minor fluctuations about constant mean values, the
process is said to be operating at steady state. If any of the process variables change with
time, transient or unsteady-state operation is said to exist. By their nature, batch and
semibatch processes are unsteady-state operations (why?), whereas continuous processes
may be either steady state or transient. Batch processing is commonly used when
relatively small quantities of a product are to be produced on any single occasion, while
continuous processing is better suited to large production rates. Continuous processes are
usually run as close to steady state as possible; unsteady-state (transient) conditions exist
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during the start-up of a process and following changes-intentional or otherwise-in process
operation conditions.
If the values of all the variables in a process (i.e., all temperatures, pressures, volumes, flow
rates) do not change with time, except possibly for minor fluctuations about constant mean
values, the process is said to be operating at steady state. If any of the process variables change
with time, transient or unsteady-state operation is said to exist. By their nature, batch and
semibatch processes are unsteady-state operations (why?), whereas continuous processes may be
either steady-state or transient. Batch processing is commonly used when relatively small
quantities of a product are to be produced on any single occasion, while continuous processing is
better suited to large production rates. Continuous processes are usually run as close to steady
state as possible; unsteady-state (transient) conditions exist during the start-up of a process and
following changes-intentional or otherwise-in process operation conditions.
Classify the following processes as batch, continuous, or semibatch, and transient or steady state.
1. A balloon is filled with air at a steady rate of 2 g/min.
2. A bottle of milk is taken from the refrigerator and left on the kitchen table.
3. Water is boiled in an open flask.
4. Carbon monoxide and steam are fed into a tubular reactor at a steady rate and react to
form carbon dioxide and hydrogen. Products and unused reactants are withdrawn at the
other end. The reactor contains air when the process is started up. The temperature of the
reactor is constant, and the composition and flow rate of the entering reactant stream are
also independent of time. Classify the process (a) initially and (b) after a long period of
time has elapsed.
Solution
1. Semibatch. transient
2. Batch. transient
3. Semibatch, transient
4. (a) Continuous, transient;
(b) Continuous, steady state.
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A balance on a conserved quantity (total mass, mass of a particular species, energy,
momentum) in a system (a single process unit, a collection of units, or an entire process) may be
written in the following general way:
The meaning of each term of the equation is illustrated in the following example
1. Each year 50,000 people move into a city, 75,000 people move out, 22,000 are born, and
19,000 die. Write a balance on the population of the city.
Solution
! ! ! ! !
50,000 + 22,000 − 75,000 − 19,000 =!
!" !" !" !" !"
!
! = −22,000
!"
We will generally use the symbol m to denote a mass, ! mass flow rate, n a number of moles,
and ! a molar flow rate.
DEGREE-OF-FREEDOM ANALYSIS
Everyone who has done material balance calculations has had the frustrating experience
of spending a long time deriving and attempting to solve equations for unknown process
variables, only to discover that not enough information is available. Before you do any lengthy
calculations, you can use a properly drawn and labeled flowchart to determine whether you have
enough information to solve a given problem. The procedure for doing so is referred to as
degree-of-freedom analysis.
To perform a degree-of-freedom analysis, draw and completely label a flowchart, count
the unknown variables on the chart, then count the independent equations relating them, and
subtract the second number from the first. The result is the number of degrees-of-freedom of the
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process. In general, degree-of-freedom DoF analysis for steady state non-reactive process
(without chemical reaction) is written as
Degree-of-Freedom = number of unknowns – numbers of independent ant equations
Degree-of-Freedom analysis for reactive process (with chemical reaction) is given as follows
DoF = number of unknowns + number of independent reactions – number of
independent material balance equations – auxillary relation (density relationship relating
mass flow rate and volumetric flow rate, specified split – bottom and top product). There
are three possibilities:
If DoF = 0, the system is completely defined and you get a unique solution
If DoF > 0, the system is under defined and there are infinite number of solutions
If DoF < 0, the system is over defined and there are too many restrictions. Over defined
problems cannot be solved to be consistent with all equations.
INDEPENDENT EQUATION
Equations are independent if you cannot derive one by adding and subtracting combinations of
the others. For example, only two of the three equations x = 3, y = 2 and x + y = 5 are independent;
anyone of them can be obtained from the other two by addition or subtraction.
In other words, a set of equations is independent if you cannot derive one by adding and
subtracting combination of others.
(a) Is the following set of equation independent?
! + 2! + ! = 1 (1)
2! + ! − ! = 2 (2)
! + 2! = 5 3
Solution
Yes, the above equations are independent because we cannot derive one by adding and
subtracting the combination of others.
(b) Is the following set of equations independent?
! + 2! + ! = 1 (1)
2! + ! − ! = 2 (2)
3! − 3! = 5 3
the above set of equations are not independent because we can derive (3) by adding equations (1)
and (2)
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Now we introduce the degree-of-freedom analysis for single unit operation where the steady
state conditions prevail.
Problem 1: Perform a degree-of-freedom analysis for flow chart given below
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Number of unknowns (x1 in Bottom and x1 in Distillate) =2
Number of independent equations (two components 1,2) =2
Number of auxillary relations (2/3 of the feed = 200 kg/s ends up in distillate which is already
given in the flowchart may not be a useful relation.
Hence auxillary relation for this problem =0
Therefore, DoF = 2 - 2 = 0
Material Balance
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Reference:
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