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Mole Balance

To quantify the extent of reaction of a given system, at least one or more mole balances are required. For the general reaction

aA+bBcC+dDaA + bB \rightarrow cC + dD

one could write a mole balance on A, assuming it was the limiting reactant. For the specific case of batch reactor, with no net flow of moles into or out of the reactor

dNAdt=rAV\frac{dN_A}{dt} = r_AV        (Equation 3)

where dNA/dt is the accumulation of moles of A in the reactor, -rA is the rate of disappearance of species A, and V is the reactor volume.

This mole balances (in equation 3) can be rearranged as follows

1VdNAdt=rA\frac{1}{V} \frac{dN_A}{dt} = r_A        (Equation 4)

where the quantity

NAV=CA\frac{N_A}{V} = C_A = the concentration of species A

For a fixed volume reactor, this yields the result

dCAdt=rA\frac{dC_A}{dt} = r_A       (Equation 5)

where a suitable rate law expression can be substituted for the variable rA.

It is through a combination of a mole balance, a rate law, and appropriate stoichiometry that an accurate reaction engineering solution may be obtained.