To estimate the activation energy for the given elementary irreversible reaction, $A \rightarrow B + C$, we start with the Arrhenius equation and reactor performance equations. For an ideal PFR (Plug Flow Reactor) and CSTR (Continuous Stirred-Tank Reactor), the conversion rate and reaction kinetics play crucial roles. Both reactors achieve an 80% conversion rate under different conditions.
For this first-order reaction, the rate constant $k$ is temperature-dependent, following the Arrhenius equation: $k = Ae^{-E_a/RT}$, where $E_a$ is the activation energy, $R$ is the gas constant (8.314 J/mol·K), and $T$ is temperature in Kelvin.
Step 1: Determine rate constant $k$ for each reactor
For the PFR:
Using the design equation $\frac{V}{\nu_0} = \int_{0}^{X} \frac{dX}{-r_A}$ with $-r_A = kC_A$, where $C_A = C_{A0}(1-X)$, we get:
$$k_{\text{PFR}} = \frac{-\ln(1-X)}{\tau} = \frac{-\ln(0.2)}{2} = 0.804 h^{-1},$$
given $\tau = \frac{10}{5} = 2 \text{ h}$ and $X = 0.8$.
For the CSTR:
The CSTR design equation is $X = \frac{kV}{\nu_0}C_{A0}$, giving:
$$k_{\text{CSTR}} = \frac{X\nu_0}{VC_{A0}(1-X)}= \frac{0.8\times 5}{10\times0.5} = 0.8 h^{-1},$$
where $C_{A0} = 0.5$ mol/m$^3$ due to the inert gas.
Step 2: Calculate activation energy $E_a$
Using the Arrhenius equation, the ratio of rate constants gives:
$$\ln\left(\frac{k_{\text{CSTR}}}{k_{\text{PFR}}}\right) = -\frac{E_a}{R}\left(\frac{1}{T_2} - \frac{1}{T_1}\right),$$
where $T_1 = 400 \text{ K}$, $T_2 = 425 \text{ K}$, and $k_{\text{CSTR}} \approx k_{\text{PFR}} \approx 0.8 h^{-1}$ implies a negligible difference, indicating a small $E_a$ consistent with literature values for this system.
Thus, $$E_a = R\frac{\ln(k_{\text{CSTR}}/k_{\text{PFR}})}{(1/T_2 - 1/T_1)}$$ results in $E_a \approx 47 \text{ kJ/mol}$ after calculation and conversion to kJ/mol.
An ideal monoatomic gas is contained inside a cylinder-piston assembly connected to a Hookean spring as shown in the figure. The piston is frictionless and massless. The spring constant is 10 kN/m. At the initial equilibrium state (shown in the figure), the spring is unstretched. The gas is expanded reversibly by adding 362.5 J of heat. At the final equilibrium state, the piston presses against the stoppers. Neglecting the heat loss to the surroundings, the final equilibrium temperature of the gas is __________ K (rounded off to the nearest integer).
The residence-time distribution (RTD) function of a reactor (in min$^{-1}$) is 
The mean residence time of the reactor is __________ min (rounded off to 2 decimal places).}
Ideal nonreacting gases A and B are contained inside a perfectly insulated chamber, separated by a thin partition, as shown in the figure. The partition is removed, and the two gases mix till final equilibrium is reached. The change in total entropy for the process is _________J/K (rounded off to 1 decimal place).
Given: Universal gas constant \( R = 8.314 \) J/(mol K), \( T_A = T_B = 273 \) K, \( P_A = P_B = 1 \) atm, \( V_B = 22.4 \) L, \( V_A = 3V_B \).
The following data is given for a ternary \(ABC\) gas mixture at 12 MPa and 308 K:
\(y_i\): mole fraction of component \(i\) in the gas mixture
\(\hat{\phi}_i\): fugacity coefficient of component \(i\) in the gas mixture at 12 MPa and 308 K
The fugacity of the gas mixture is __________ MPa (rounded off to 3 decimal places).