Artigo Revisado por pares

Solar Carbothermal Reduction of ZnO: Shrinking Packed-Bed Reactor Modeling and Experimental Validation

2004; American Chemical Society; Volume: 43; Issue: 25 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/ie049619q

ISSN

1520-5045

Autores

Thomas Osinga, G. Olalde, Aldo Steinfeld,

Tópico(s)

Oil, Gas, and Environmental Issues

Resumo

The thermodynamics and kinetics of the carbothermic reduction of ZnO are examined over the temperature range 400−1600 K. Above 1340 K, the equilibrium composition of the stoichiometric chemical system consists of an equimolar gas mixture of Zn (vapor) and CO. Assuming a first-order rate constant for the surface reaction kinetics between ZnO(s) and CO and further applying a shrinking spherical particle model with an unreacted core, the apparent activation energy obtained by linear regression of the thermogravimetric data is EA = 201.5 kJ/mol. A numerical model is formulated for a solar chemical reactor that uses concentrated solar radiation as the energy source of process heat. The model involves solving, by the finite-volume technique, a 1D unsteady-state energy equation that couples heat transfer to the chemical kinetics for a shrinking packed bed exposed to thermal radiation. Validation is accomplished by comparison with experimentally measured temperature profiles and Zn production rates as a function of time, obtained for a 5-kW solar reactor tested in a high-flux solar furnace. Application of the model for a scaled-up reactor predicts a large temperature gradient at the top layer, which is typical of ablation processes where heat transfer through the bed becomes the rate-controlling mechanism. Once the temperature of the top layer exceeds 1200 K, the bed shrinks at an approximately constant speed of 2.8 × 10-5 m/s as the reaction proceeds under a constant radiative flux input.

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