Exploiting the Nonlinear Frequency Response Method to Evaluate the Potential of Forced Periodic Operation of Reactors
Abstract
Forced periodic operation of chemical reactors possess significant potential to improve numerous performance criteria. The corresponding analysis of reaction systems and the estimation of the magnitude of possible performance improvements have occupied many researchers since the earlier explorations by Douglas and Rippin (1966), Horn and Lin (1967) and Bailey (1973). Theoretical problems related to identification and estimation of enhancement were typically analyzed evaluating suitable control criteria applying four major approaches described by Watanabe et al. (1981) and Parulekar (2003). However, there are hardly industrial applications of the promising concept and there is still a need in generally applicable methods for identifying and analyzing promising reaction systems. New Approach We suggest applying the nonlinear frequency response (NFR) method to predict the outcome of perturbing periodically one or several input variables. Applying the concept of higher order frequency r...esponse functions (FRFs) weakly nonlinear systems can be described analytically (Petkovska and Seidel-Morgenstern, 2013). Those systems contain a harmonic and a non-periodic (DC) term. As an indicator for the mean performance of the forced periodic operation the value and sign of the DC component of the outlet give insight up to which extent improvements can be expected by the forced input changes. Applying the NRF method the non-periodic term can be efficiently estimated for the modulation of a single input and also for multiple inputs. To demonstrate the strength of the theoretical concept the model of an adiabatic CSTR was analyzed considering reactions of different order. Estimates are provided for different frequencies of sinusoidal changes of the inlet composition, the total inlet flow and the feed temperature. It will be shown, that it is in particular attractive to perturb simultaneously two input variables using an optimal phase shift, which can be determined using our method (Nikolic et al., 2015). Experimental To validate theoretical predictions we carried out experiments in a laboratory scale CSTR considering the hydrolysis of acetic anhydride as a test reaction. The performance of the reaction system was evaluated with respect to different objectives under various steady state conditions, including theoretically optimal ones, and for various types of single and binary input perturbations.
Keywords:
chemical reactors / nonlinear frequency response / steady stateSource:
German reaction Engineering Meeting (DECHEMA), Wuerzburg, Germany, 2016Funding / projects:
- Nanostructured Functional and Composite Materials in Catalytic and Sorption Processes (RS-45001)
- The development of efficient chemical-engineering processes based on the transport phenomena research and process intensification principles (RS-172022)
Institution/Community
Tehnološko-metalurški fakultetTY - CONF AU - Petkovska, Menka AU - Nikolić, Daliborka AU - Felischak, Matthias AU - Seidel-Morgenstern, Andreas PY - 2016 UR - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3185 AB - Forced periodic operation of chemical reactors possess significant potential to improve numerous performance criteria. The corresponding analysis of reaction systems and the estimation of the magnitude of possible performance improvements have occupied many researchers since the earlier explorations by Douglas and Rippin (1966), Horn and Lin (1967) and Bailey (1973). Theoretical problems related to identification and estimation of enhancement were typically analyzed evaluating suitable control criteria applying four major approaches described by Watanabe et al. (1981) and Parulekar (2003). However, there are hardly industrial applications of the promising concept and there is still a need in generally applicable methods for identifying and analyzing promising reaction systems. New Approach We suggest applying the nonlinear frequency response (NFR) method to predict the outcome of perturbing periodically one or several input variables. Applying the concept of higher order frequency response functions (FRFs) weakly nonlinear systems can be described analytically (Petkovska and Seidel-Morgenstern, 2013). Those systems contain a harmonic and a non-periodic (DC) term. As an indicator for the mean performance of the forced periodic operation the value and sign of the DC component of the outlet give insight up to which extent improvements can be expected by the forced input changes. Applying the NRF method the non-periodic term can be efficiently estimated for the modulation of a single input and also for multiple inputs. To demonstrate the strength of the theoretical concept the model of an adiabatic CSTR was analyzed considering reactions of different order. Estimates are provided for different frequencies of sinusoidal changes of the inlet composition, the total inlet flow and the feed temperature. It will be shown, that it is in particular attractive to perturb simultaneously two input variables using an optimal phase shift, which can be determined using our method (Nikolic et al., 2015). Experimental To validate theoretical predictions we carried out experiments in a laboratory scale CSTR considering the hydrolysis of acetic anhydride as a test reaction. The performance of the reaction system was evaluated with respect to different objectives under various steady state conditions, including theoretically optimal ones, and for various types of single and binary input perturbations. C3 - German reaction Engineering Meeting (DECHEMA), Wuerzburg, Germany T1 - Exploiting the Nonlinear Frequency Response Method to Evaluate the Potential of Forced Periodic Operation of Reactors UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_technorep_3185 ER -
@conference{ author = "Petkovska, Menka and Nikolić, Daliborka and Felischak, Matthias and Seidel-Morgenstern, Andreas", year = "2016", abstract = "Forced periodic operation of chemical reactors possess significant potential to improve numerous performance criteria. The corresponding analysis of reaction systems and the estimation of the magnitude of possible performance improvements have occupied many researchers since the earlier explorations by Douglas and Rippin (1966), Horn and Lin (1967) and Bailey (1973). Theoretical problems related to identification and estimation of enhancement were typically analyzed evaluating suitable control criteria applying four major approaches described by Watanabe et al. (1981) and Parulekar (2003). However, there are hardly industrial applications of the promising concept and there is still a need in generally applicable methods for identifying and analyzing promising reaction systems. New Approach We suggest applying the nonlinear frequency response (NFR) method to predict the outcome of perturbing periodically one or several input variables. Applying the concept of higher order frequency response functions (FRFs) weakly nonlinear systems can be described analytically (Petkovska and Seidel-Morgenstern, 2013). Those systems contain a harmonic and a non-periodic (DC) term. As an indicator for the mean performance of the forced periodic operation the value and sign of the DC component of the outlet give insight up to which extent improvements can be expected by the forced input changes. Applying the NRF method the non-periodic term can be efficiently estimated for the modulation of a single input and also for multiple inputs. To demonstrate the strength of the theoretical concept the model of an adiabatic CSTR was analyzed considering reactions of different order. Estimates are provided for different frequencies of sinusoidal changes of the inlet composition, the total inlet flow and the feed temperature. It will be shown, that it is in particular attractive to perturb simultaneously two input variables using an optimal phase shift, which can be determined using our method (Nikolic et al., 2015). Experimental To validate theoretical predictions we carried out experiments in a laboratory scale CSTR considering the hydrolysis of acetic anhydride as a test reaction. The performance of the reaction system was evaluated with respect to different objectives under various steady state conditions, including theoretically optimal ones, and for various types of single and binary input perturbations.", journal = "German reaction Engineering Meeting (DECHEMA), Wuerzburg, Germany", title = "Exploiting the Nonlinear Frequency Response Method to Evaluate the Potential of Forced Periodic Operation of Reactors", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_technorep_3185" }
Petkovska, M., Nikolić, D., Felischak, M.,& Seidel-Morgenstern, A.. (2016). Exploiting the Nonlinear Frequency Response Method to Evaluate the Potential of Forced Periodic Operation of Reactors. in German reaction Engineering Meeting (DECHEMA), Wuerzburg, Germany. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_technorep_3185
Petkovska M, Nikolić D, Felischak M, Seidel-Morgenstern A. Exploiting the Nonlinear Frequency Response Method to Evaluate the Potential of Forced Periodic Operation of Reactors. in German reaction Engineering Meeting (DECHEMA), Wuerzburg, Germany. 2016;. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_technorep_3185 .
Petkovska, Menka, Nikolić, Daliborka, Felischak, Matthias, Seidel-Morgenstern, Andreas, "Exploiting the Nonlinear Frequency Response Method to Evaluate the Potential of Forced Periodic Operation of Reactors" in German reaction Engineering Meeting (DECHEMA), Wuerzburg, Germany (2016), https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_technorep_3185 .