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Analysis of gas absorption to a thin liquid film in the presence of a zero-order chemical reactionThe paper presents a detailed theoretical analysis of the process of gas absorption to a thin liquid film adjacent to a horizontal rotating disk. The film is formed by the impingement of a controlled liquid jet at the center of the disk and subsequent radial spreading of liquid along the disk. The chemical reaction between the gas and the liquid film can be expressed as a zero-order homogeneous reaction. The process was modeled by establishing equations for the conservation of mass, momentum, and species concentration and solving them analytically. A scaling analysis was used to determine dominant transport processes. Appropriate boundary conditions were used to solve these equations to develop expressions for the local concentration of gas across the thickness of the film and distributions of film height, bulk concentration, and Sherwood number along the radius of the disk. The partial differential equation for species concentration was solved using the separation of variables technique along with the Duhamel's theorem and the final analytical solution was expressed using confluent hypergeometric functions. Tables for eigenvalues and eigenfunctions are presented for a number of reaction rate constants. A parametric study was performed using Reynolds number, Ekman number, and dimensionless reaction rate as parameters. At all radial locations, Sherwood number increased with Reynolds number (flow rate) as well as Ekman number (rate of rotation). The enhancement of mass transfer due to chemical reaction was found to be small when compared to the case of no reaction (pure absorption), but the enhancement factor was very significant when compared to pure absorption in a stagnant liquid film. The zero-order reaction processes considered in the present investigation included the absorption of oxygen in aqueous alkaline solutions of sodiumdithionite and rhodium complex catalyzed carbonylation of methanol. Present analytical results were compared to previous theoretical results for limiting conditions, and were found to have very good agreement.
Document ID
19950020927
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Rajagopalan, S.
(University of South Florida Tampa, FL, United States)
Rahman, M. M.
(University of South Florida Tampa, FL, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Lewis Research Center, The Sixth Annual Thermal and Fluids Analysis Workshop
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer
Accession Number
95N27348
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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