Title :
Minimal state representation for open fluid-fluid reaction systems
Author :
Bhatt, Nimitt ; Amrhein, M. ; Srinivasan, Bama ; Mullhaupt, P. ; Bonvin, D.
Author_Institution :
Lab. d´Autom., Ecole Polytech. Fed. de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract :
Reaction systems can be represented by first-principles models that describe the evolution of the states (typically concentrations, volume and temperature) by means of conservation equations of differential nature and constitutive equations of algebraic nature. The resulting models often contain redundant states since the various concentrations are not all linearly independent; indeed, the variability observed in the concentrations is caused by the reactions, the mass transferred between phases, the inlet and outlet streams. A minimal state representation is a dynamic model that exhibits the same behavior as the original model but has no redundant state. This paper considers the material balance equations associated with an open fluid-fluid reaction system that involves Sl species, R independent reactions, pl independent inlets and one outlet in the first fluid phase (e.g. the liquid phase) and Sg species, pg independent inlets and one outlet in the second fluid phase (e.g. the gas phase). In addition, there are pm species transferring between the two phases. The (Sl+Sg)-dimensional model is transformed to q = R + 2pm + pl + pg +2 variant states and Sl +Sg -q invariant states. Then, using the concept of accessibility of nonlinear systems, the conditions under which the transformed model is a minimal state representation are derived. It will be shown that the minimal number of concentration measurements needed to reconstruct the full state without kinetic information is R + pm. The simulated chlorination of butanoic acid is used to illustrate the various concepts developed in the paper.
Keywords :
algebra; chemical reactions; mass transfer; nonlinear control systems; algebraic nature; butanoic acid chlorination; conservation equation; constitutive equation; dynamic model; first-principles model; inlet stream; mass transfer; material balance equation; minimal state representation; nonlinear system accessibility; open fluid-fluid reaction system; outlet stream; redundant states; state evolution; Current measurement; Equations; Kinetic theory; Mathematical model; Nonlinear systems; Transforms; Vectors;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference (ACC), 2012
Conference_Location :
Montreal, QC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1095-7
Electronic_ISBN :
0743-1619
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2012.6315195