ON THE CONCEPT OF THE STEADY STATE IN CHEMICAL REACTOR ANALYSIS

Abstract
The inlet and outlet streams of a chemical reactor may reach a steady state before the internal distributions of concentration, etc. have come to the steady state. Such a steady state, in which the reactor is viewed only as a system with certain inputs and outputs, may be called the black-box steady state (BBSS). The existence of a BBSS does not always imply that of a true SS, and the BBSS may be attained in a finite time even though the SS is only attained asymptotically. Indeed under some circumstances the BBSS can be achieved immediately upon start-up. Provided that the internal transients are not catastrophic, the practical, or operator's, concept of a steady state is really that of a BBSS.

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