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Assignmen’ .CH6403 Chemical Process calculations 1) A coal has the following ultimate analysis: C = 0.8339, Hz = 0.0456, O2 = 0.0505, Nz = 0.0103, S = 0.0064, ash = 0.0533, total = 1.000. This coal is burned in a steam-boiler furnace. Determine the weight of air required for theoretically perfect combustion, the weight of gas formed per pound of coal burned, and the volume of flue gas at the boiler exit temperature of 600°F (589 K) per pound of coal burned; the air required with 20 percent excess air and the volume of gas formed with this excess; and the CO, percentage in the flue gas on a dry and wet basis 2) A steel container has a volume of 200 mS, It is filled with nitrogen at 22°C and atmospheric pressure. If the container valve is opened and the container heated to 200°C, caleulate the fraction of the nitrogen which leaves the container. 3) A synthetic gas generated from coal has the following composition: CO, 7.2%; CO, 24.3%; Ho, 14.1%; CHg, 3.5%; Nz, 50.9%. (a) Calculate the cubic feet of air necessary for complete combustion per cubic foot of synthetic gas at the same conditions, (b) _1£38% excess air were used for combustion, what volume of flue gas at 750°F and 738 mm Hg would be produced per cubic foot of synthetic gas at standard conditions? (©) Calculate the flue gas analysis for (a) and (b). 4) Chlorine gas containing 2.4 percent O2 is flowing through an earthenware pipe. The gas flow rate is measured by introducing air into it atthe rate of 115 m3/min. Further down the line, after mixing is complete, the gas is found to contain 10.85 percent Op. How many m° of the initial gas were flowing per minute through the pipe? 5) A furnace used to provide heat to anneal steel burns a fuel oil whose composition can be represented as (CH2)n. It is planned to bum this fuel with stoichiometric air. a. Assume complete combustion and calculate the Orsat analysis of the flue gas. b. Recalculate the Orsat analysis assuming that 5 % of the carbon in the fuel burns to CO only. 6) ‘Your assistant reports the following experimental data for the exit Orsat gas analysis from the combustion of a hydrocarbon oil in a furnace: CO 11.8 %; CO 5.0 %; Hy 1.5 %; Op 1.0% and No by difference. The oil is being bumned with 10 % excess air. Would you compliment him on his work ? 2 Many chemicals generate emissions of volatile compounds that need to be controlled. In the process shown in the accompanying figure, the CO in the exhaust is substantially reduced by separating it from the reactor effluent and recycling the unreacted CO together with the reactant. ‘Although the product is proprietary, information is provided that the fresh feed stream contains 40 % reactant, 50 % inert and 10 % CO, and that on reaction 2 moles of reactant yield 2.5 moles of product. Conversion of the reactant to product is 73 % on one pass through the reactor, and 90 % for the over all process. The recycle stream contains 80% CO and 20% reactant. Calculate the ratio ‘of moles of the recycle stream to moles of the product stream. 8) 20 £13 of nitrogen at 300 psig and 100°F and 30 f@ of oxygen at 200 psig and340°F are injected into a 15 ft3 vessel. ‘The vessel is then cooled to 70°F. Find the partial pressure of each component in the 15 ft3 vessel. Assume that the ideal gas law applies. 9) In the feed-preparation section of an ammonia plant, hydrogen is produced from methane by a combination steam-reforming/partial-oxidation process. Enough air is used in partial oxidation to give a 3:1 hydrogen-nitrogen molar ratio in the feed to the ammonia unit. The hydrogen-nitrogen mixture is heated to reaction temperature and fed into a fixed-bed reactor where 20 percent conversion of reactants to ammonia is obtained per pass. After leaving the reactor, the mixture is cooled and the ammonia removed by condensation. The unreacted hydrogen-nitrogen mixture is recycled and mixed with fresh feed. On the basis of 100 kg - mol/h (220 Ib- moV/h) of fresh feed, make a material balance and determine the ammonia-production and recycle rates. 10) The spent catalyst from a catalytic-cracking reactor is taken to the regenerator for reactivation. Coke deposited on the catalyst in the reactor is removed by burning with air, and the flue gas is vented. The coke is a mixture of carbon and high-molecular-weight tars considered to be hydrocarbons. For the following conditions, calculate the weight percent of hydrogen in the coke. Assume that the coke on the regenerated catalyst has the same composition as the coke on the spent catalyst: Carbon on spent catalyst 1.50 wt % Carbon on regenerated catalyst (0.80 wt % Air from blower 150,000 kg/h (330,000 Ib/h) Hydrocarbon feed to reactor 300,000 kg/h (660,000 Ib/h) Flue gas analysis (dry basis): CO: 12.0vol % co 6.0 vol % 0: 7 vol % N; _8L3 vol % 100.0

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